 —
V I L I L'ft I A    •    6
 ,	
Clay Deposits in Fernie
May Mean Industry
— Pa_e Two
***|001t i
\.n
Joe Cronin Is Sold for
a Record Price
— Pa&e Seven
VOLUME tl
WS^'-ftA   •
NELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOtIR 27.1»S4
FIVS CSNtS A COPY
NUMBER IW
OPPOSING ARMIES BATTLE IN AUSTRIA
15 Ambushed and Killed in Clash
Between Catholics and Mexicans
MEXICO, DT., Oct. 26 (AP).—The dumber of deputlei wu
informed tonight thit 15 penoni were imbuihed md killed in i
fight between militant Catholic elementi and local authoritiei near
Tanhuato, Mlchoaca.
The ambuicade, deputlei were told, waa arranged by a religious
taction.
Ban to Be Lifted Sunday-
Health Situation Better
Triumph for British as Scott Plane Breaks Record
DEMOCRATS IN
5arty Does Not Care
to Have Socialist
as a Democrat
COMEDY OF ERRORS
BY WASHINGTON
Farley's Endorsation
Not Authentic Says
Washington
BT CECIL a DICKSON
Associated preu Staff Writer
WASHINOTON, Oct. 26 (AP)—
The Roosevelt admlnlitntlon definitely turned iwiy from Upton
Sinclair today, dropping unmls-
tikiblt Indications thit tt doei
not care to hive the former Sodil-
lit elected ai Democratic governor
Of California.
A letter trom Democratic head-
Ouarters, urging the election of
Sinclair and carrying the tlgna-
turr of Postmaster Oenenl Jamei
A. Farley In the green Ink he alwaya uses, wai termed a "mistake "
The signature was affixed with •
rubber stimp. its dispitch wn
Kid to hive been an error on
the psrt of i minor employee.
A growing belief hert thit the nd-
(Contlnuid on Pige Tin)
Seek Daughter of
Senator in U.S.A.
RENO, Nev„ Oct 26 (API-
Department of Juitlce agentt wera
tonight to hava joined In a aiarch
for Mlu Patricia McCarran, 15-
year-old daughtir of Senator Patrick A. McCarran of Nivada, who
Rano polloe uld, diippeired from
har home Mondiy night.
Irish Free State
to Delve Into the
Currency Problem
DUBLIN. Irish Free State, Oct. 36
(OP Cible).—The Iriih Free State
government his appointed a commlulon of 20 to Inquire Into currency and banking problem! of the
Ftee State.
The commlulon'! talk wlll be to
•limine ind report on the system
of currency, bulking, credit, public
borrowing ind lending ind pledging
of itate cndlt on behilf of igrlcul-
ture. Industry snd social services.
It li also chirged with the talk
of considering whit ehingei ire
•dvlsible.
Thl sleek Britlih Comet airplane, "Grosvenor Houu," piloted by
T. Cimpbell Black (left, below) ind C, W. A. Scott (right, balow) which
lid thl field In thl London to Mllbourm cliulc. It wai in English
entry. Thl performinci ot thi Britlih airplane ll hilled u • triumph
for Britlih engineering. Thi other two ilrplines, ona piloted by Dutch
•Irmen, tha other by Col. Roicoi Turner, an U.S. built.
CONSTRUCTION STARTS UPON A
100TONMILLFORTHEQUEEN
Crew Concentrated on Surface Work; Get
Power Soon
With the underground development work in the Queen mine limited
through breaking of the Sheep creek flume, the Wolf creek flume delivering only enough water to the compreisor plant to keep the mine
Sumps going in addition to one ihlft of drilling for the new shaft,
lanagcr H, I. Doelle of the Sheep Creek Gold Mine!, Limited, hai turned
hii entire available labor force to comtruction of the new mill, which
hai been authorized by the directorate.
SITE IS CLEARED
i Work on the mill site, which it on the bank of Wolf creek, but
further down itream than originally chosen, itarted a couple of days
ahead of the snow, but in ipite of deep mud the scenery li being rapidly
changed by tractor, ifraper, stone-boat, broadaxes, picks and shovels,
the site has been cleared, a fill is being made along the edge of the
creek to carry the new roadway, the old being obliterated by the mill
lite, and a big drainage culvert hai been built with logs. A fill ii also
being made for a yard below the mill.
A few yard! above the mill site, carpenters are building the forms
for the concrete foundations for the main building, which will roughly
be 110 by 90 feet, and for the plant
CITY WILL BE
BACK TO ITS
NORMAL TREND
Churches and Sunday
Schools Open Up
Doors Sunday
SCHOOLS, THEATER
OPEN ON MONDAY
Poliomyelitis and the
Diphtheria Outbreak
Is Now Curbed
A normal tnnd of ictlvltiei
will agalned be returned In Nelson
Sunday morning when the second bin on public githerlngi wlll
be lifted. On Mondiy school! will
alio reopen. •
Church and Sundiy tchool ic-
tlvMles wll] be returned sundiy
morning and sporting and other
events scheduled, wlll be carried
ont For more than a week the
elty has been tied up In a strict
ban which barred all public gathering!.
Kervlee dubi and other public
bodlei wlll be itiie to function
after Sunday  and  numerous dis
continued on Pags Tan)
SUCCESSOR OF AL
OTONEB JAILED
Cets 18 Months snd Is Fined
$5000 tor Evssion of
Income Tsx
McRAE NOT TO
RUN FOR MAYOR
Coast Alderman Retires From
Race on Advice of His
Physician
VANCOUVER, Oct. 26 <CP)-
Mayor L. D. Taylor stood alone today as the only candidate definitely
in the current Vancouver mayoralty
campaign following the announcement of Alderman J. J. McRae that
he is withdrawing from the race on
the advice of his physician.
"My i.ysiclan has advised me not
to put myself to the added strain
of a mayoralty campaign at thts
time," Alderman McRae stated today. "While I am willing to make
any reasonable aacrificc in the city's
interest, I believe it would be up-
wise and not ln the best interest of
the public or myself to act contrary to his advice."
Others reported to be considering
candidacy are G. G. McGeer, M.L.A.,
J. W. Cornett and Dr. A. K Buchanan.
Business Volume, Mineral
Production on Up Qrade
Business Recovery Mounting According to the Statistics
for First Nine Months of 1934 Compared
With Last Year
to be installed in it. It is hoped to
have the building covered in by the
end of November. The coarse crushing plant will be in a separate building higher up the bank.
STRAIGHT CVANIOE
The mill installation, which will
utilise a straight cyanide process,
will be for a unit of 100 tons ore
capacity. Tbe. initial crushing ca
pacity Will be for ISO tons.
At an early date the Queen w "1
have electric power from the West
Kootenay Power St Light company'*! Sheep creek transformer*
house by the Kootenay Belle mill,
but* thenhort -line to' ctrrythe current to the Queen'! transformer
station, which will be located by
thc mill, has not yet been'built. As
soon as the current is available,
possibly in th next couple of weeks,
tlve.company will be able to resume
its full development program, and
a awitch will be made to electric
pumps,
Other new surface equipment is
the new blacksmith shop and machine ihop, built near the tunnel
portal, but up-creek trom the old
shop, whose site is required for the
new shaft.
WORK ON NEW SHAFT
Prom No. 7 level, the one on which
the downward extension of the big
ore body of higher workings wai re-
(Contlnued on  Paga Ten)
OTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP).—The receipt of information regarding the
first nine monthi of 1934 sheds further light on the extent of the business
recovery, says the weekly economic review of the Dominion bureau of
statistics. The level of productive operation! waa much higher than in
the corresponding monthi of 1933, the index of the physical volume of
builnesi baaed on 45 factor! averaging 94.0 ln the elapsed period 6f
1934 compared with 77.4 in the same period of last year. The gain ot 21.4
per cent is evidence of a marked resumption of business and productive
•nterpriie over the level! of lait year.
In wholeiale prices the official index of 567 commodities during the
flnt nine monthi of 1934 wai 71.71 compared with 66.7 ln the flrat nine
months of 1933.
The index of mineral production based on nine factors rose from
107.0 in the first nine months of 1933 to 134.0 in the elapsed period of
the preient year, a gain of 25.2 per cent.
Manufacturing index based on 29 factors, during the first nine
month! of thli year, iveraged 93.2 compared with 77 J in the lame period
of lait year.
McAdoo Miss Foils
to Use Her Licence
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 36 (AP).—The
marriage licence of 10-year-old Slim
Wilson McAdoo, gnnddiughter of
Preildent Wilson, ipplled tor ln
Riverside list Mondiy, hid not been
luued' todiy to her ind her prospective huibind, 38-yeir-old Rifielo
Lopei dt Onste. Spmlih film ictor.
Thti wii. to hive been their wedding day.
CmCAOO, Oct. 36 (AP).—Public
enemy Murray Llewellyn Humphreys,
successor in ricketi to Al Capone,
fill heir todiy to the Ciponi fate
is well ind wu sentenced to prlion
on hli pita of guilty to tba ehirge
thlt hi dodged hli Incomt tu
bill.
He* pleaded guilty to evidlng 128.-
190 tixei on in Incomt tottlllng
S1SS.561 tor the thret yean ended
In 1932. Judgt Woodward ordered
Humphreys to Leavenworth penitentiary for IS monthi md fined
him 06000. Be wlll hive to piy hli
delinquent t» bill besides.
MRS. SANKEY IS
NOT GUILTY
SIOUX PALLS, S.D., Oct 26
(AP)—Mn. Pirn Mai Sankey,
widow of tha lata Varna Sankiy,
gangster and one-time wutern
Canada railroader, wai icquitted
tonight by a federal court jury of
a charge of coniplncy In tha
Chirlu Bottteher II kidnapping.
It wai Mn. Sankay'i second
trial on thli charge, ( previous
jury having dlugreed.
WILLSTEVENS
QUIT CABINET?
Protests   About   His
Pamphlet Cause Row
in Cabinet Meet
MONTBEAL, Oet. 27 (Siturdiy)
(Cr).—"Before the end of tbe
present week It li expected thit
Hon. H. H. Stevens, minister of
trade and commerce, will have
quit hli post u chilrmin of the
royal commission inveitlgitlng
miss buying and price spreads.
and ponlbly hli portfolio to the
Bennett cabinet." the Montreal
Oaaette wyt todiy In a despatch
from Iti Ottawi corretpondent.
OTTAWA, Oet. tl (CP).—The
action of Bon. H. B. Stevens,
bead ef the price ipreid commission In Inning his celebrated
pamphlet On the probe, hu aroused itrong protests tn the cabinet
meetings of today ind yesterdiy,
It wu itated officially tonight.
Some of his colleagues wanted to
know why Mr. Stevens luued the
tapet ud alio took exception lo
(MUs stitementi made by him
on puMIe platforms.
Pnmler B. B. Bennett tonight
(ContlnUM on Paga Tan)
CANADA MAY BE
STARTING POINT
Ulm Plans  Flight From  the
Dominion to Australia
in November
55 Cars of Apples
Shipped From Nelson
The number of can of applei
that has rolled from the warehouse «r the Auociited Orowen
■t Ntlton, hu new reached S.I.
stltei W. M. Vlnce, loral manager.
Cin are ahlpped with fair regularity, tha greater part ot them
going to prairie Polnti. Oversea!
shipments, however, compare favorably with last year.
Australians Seek
Secession Rights
LONDON, Oct. 26 (AR- Four
western Auitrallan delegate! came
to London today to ask the King
and parliament to permit their
itite'i recesilon from the Australian
commonwealth.
A recent plebiscite held in weatern Australia, separated by more
than 1000 milei of wasteland from
eutern Auitrilla, ihowed IU people
favored separation by more than 2
to 1.
RADICAL SOCIALISTS
TRY SAVE DOUMERGUE
NANTES, Fnnoe. Oct. 3d (CP).—
Effort* to uve Pnmler Outon Doumergue'! threitentd nitlonil gov*
ernment were being mide todiy.
The powerful Ridlcil ind Judical
Socialist pirty, which la holding
three-day congreis hen psssed
resolution cilculited to pavi tbe
wiy tor a middle oount thit would
prevent the pnmler ind thtttenita
from finding themselves it logger*
heidt wltb one mother on the
premier'! reform progrim.
HONOLULU, Oct. 36 (AP)-Leon
Skilling, navigator for the famous
Australian flyer, Charles Ulm, an
nounced on arrival here today from
Australia that he, Ulm, George M.
Littlejohn and another Australian
airman would attempt a flight from
Canada to Australia ln November.
Skilling said the four men probably would take off from Vancouver
or Montreal, and fly to Melbourne,
with landings at Honolulu, Fiji
islands and Auckland, N.Z.
Ulm and Littlejohn, he said, are
in England testing a plane for the
flight.
' Ulm was copilot with Sir Charles
Kingsford-Smith when he with two
Americans, Harry W. -Lyon, navigator, and James Warner, wireless
operator, fief from Oakland, Cal..
to Sydney, Australia, via Honolulu
and Fiji in June, 1928,
POPE CONGRATULATES
BRITISH PI
TRY TO BREAK
SCOTTSMARK
Complete First Lap of
Return Flying. Trip
to Great Britain
JONES-WALLER
AFTER RECORD
Other Race Fliers Are
Still on Way; Dutch
Plane Is Burned
CHARLEVII.I.E, Australia, Oet. tt
(Saturday)—(CP cable via Rrutrrs)
—Cathcart Jones and Ken Waller
completed the flrat lap of the return Journey from Melbourne to
London avenging mort than too
miles an hour.
They tendM at Charleville, ttl
miles from Melbourne, it 10:00
i.m. local time <7.«o p.m. Frldty
t.S.T.i saturdiy after turing off
on the projected 11,300 mile flight
at 1.09 a.m.
The Britlih flyeri. four* ln the
Oreit London to Melbourne sir derby
finished thli week, hope to ttt a
new record for the round time from
England to Australia ind return.
They took i little leu thin five
dayi on the outgoing journey.
STOPPED  40  MINUTES
After • 40-mlnute itop thiy took
oft for Port Darwin on thi north
(Contlnuad on Ptgi Tan)
Markets at
a Glance
By thi Cinidlan Preu
Toronto and Montreal—Induitrial
itock irregularly lower.
Toronto minei—Lower.
New York— Stoeki lower and
heavy at cloae.
Winnipeg—Wheat allghtly higher.
London—Bar illver and line unchanged; copper, tin and lead higher.
New York—Bar illver, tin and
lead unchanged; line lower.
Montreal—December silver lower.
New York—Cotton, rubber and
coffee lower; sugar unchanged.
New York—Canadian dollar up
5-16 to 1.03 3-16.
ISOLATE EMPIRE
IN CASE OF WAR
UPON CONTINENT
Such It Plea of Lord Beaver-
brook; Dominion Would
Not Follow Britain
LORD   BEAVLR8R00K
LONDON. Oct 36 (CP Cable)
Isolation of the United Kingdom
and tha Britlah Empire from continental qutrrela wu idvocated to*
night by Lord Beiverbrook, Canadian-born newspaper peer md
staunch Imperialist.
In a broadcast iddresi Lord Beav-
erbrook declared thit ill Europe
believed mother wu was inevitable,
md mmy believed that Oermany,
not Prince, would triumph. British
Intervention would not determine
the luue, ind tht Leigue of Nation! offend so solution, he laid.
The Locarno agreement, he contended, had been washed out by events.
"The Dominion! will not follow ui
Into Europetn quirrels," laid Lord
Beiverbrook. "Iaolatlon ot the Empire gives na a good, chanoe of
keeping out of the next war. And
our Iaolatlon ahould Include aawcl-
itlon with the United statu, to
lecun tha affirmation of ill Anglo-
Saxons to the declaration,. "Wa ihall
pirtlclpite In no mon win."*
Jaeger Quits the
Nazi Church Body
BBRLIW. Oct. 26 (AP).—Relchl-
hlshop Ludwlg Mueller'! hard-fisted
second ln commind, Dr. Auguit
Jaeaer, quit todiy, leaving Mueller
to hold the llnu igilnit thl mmy
bitter forcti of hli church prognm.
A letter Jaeger Mnt Mueller conveyed hit resignation u Naal commissioner for Protestant ehurohes
ln Prussia, md propoted thit Mueller cell "an Inner council of bishops
to assist you ln this reconstruction
work, with prospect of true piclflca-
tlon."
ANTIOONISH, N.S., Oct. 26 (CP).
—Popt Plui XI todiy lent • con-
gntiflitory cable to Moit Rlv. John
Hugh MacDonald, D.D, biihop of
Victoria, on hli consecration hen
yesterday. The new blthop leaves for
Vlctorli Nov. 3.
OSBORNE, SECRETARY OF Tl BANK
OF ENGLAND, JOINS BANK OF CANADA
FIND CAUSE OF
SWIMMER'S ITCH
WINNIPEG, Oct 26 (CP)—Tha
ciuse of "swimmers' Itch," an affliction luffered by bithert In
Clear lake In Riding Mountain
nitlonil pirk, hu been ditcovered
by J, A. McLeod, graduate atudent
of the Univenlty of Minltobi.
The orginlim ciuilng the Itch hai
been iigngitid by Dr. McLeod,
thut miking control of thi diseue
ooitlbli.
Indian Question Will Be Big Thing Upon
British Parliament Agenda Next Week
Yiddish Accounts
Cost Pont Seller
Cool Fine of $50
MONTREAL, Oet 26 (CP)-Yim
Solomon Krochmalnlck found out
todiy ha ihould conduct hli pints
buslneu ilthar In Frinch or English, Insofar is hli bookkeeping
wu concerned. Chirged with in
Infraction of tha Quebec Women'i
Minimum Wige act, Krochmalnlck wai fined $10 and costs for
miking antrlu In his booki In
Yiddish, a language not understood by most government In-
tpteton.
Former Kootenay Mon
It D^ad in Alaska
KETCHIKAN, Aluka, Oct. 26
(AP).—The funeral for A. P. Craig.
63, who hid lived here 24 years and
previously at Noma and near Nelaon, B.C., will be held on Sunday.
He died Wedneidoy after a lingering Illness.
The widow, • son, Albert Jr., 29,
of New York City, and a 13-year-old
daughter, lurvlve.
Canada is Ready to Take Place
With Britain In World Aff airs
LONDON, Oct. 26 (CP ctble).-
Canada'i high commluloner to
Oreat Britain, Hon. O. Howard Ferguson, tonight Mid thtt Canada
wu ready to take tier ptrt with
Great Britain ln leadenhip of world
attain.
Addressing the annual dinner of
the City of London Wholeaale Linen
Trade anoclatlon, Mr. Ferguson said
Canada'i idea now wu to be ptrt of
the British Empire which was going
to control world attain. He was
cheered by the memben as he concluded hil speech.
"I came here believing that In
world attain the settlement of difficulties depends upon leadership,"
sold the former Ontario Conservative premier. "History has shown
that the country which can lead thc
world better than any other ll Britain."
Betting and Lotteries Bill Is
Pomeste   Issue;   House
Sits on October 30
LONDON, Oct. 26 (CP cable)-
Parliament reassembles on Tuesday,
October 30, and lt is hoped to complete remaining work by about November 16 in which case the new
parliament may be opened with the
speech from the throne on November 20.
By far the greatest Interest of
the waning session md the new sei-
sions following closely afterward,
at .aches to the Indian question. The
Joint parliament committee which
made exhaustive study ot tbe preient Indian proposals ta contained
in the governmental white paper,
must table Its report before the end
of the preient parliament
The white paper lava down pro-
porals for greiter self-government
with safeguards, In other wordi reserving vital questions like defence
for British authority. While the die-
hards condemn this as a surrender,
the Indian congress party equally
condemns it as inadequate. So far
u tho latter Is concerned, however,
the situation has Improved immensely, undoubtedly owln(| to Lord Wil-
llngdon's firm administration, inasmuch as the congress is apparently
Will  Be  Deputy Governor;
French-Canadian Will
Be Assistant Deputy
OTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)-J. A. C.
Osborne, secretary of tho Bank of
England, has been appointed deputy
governor of the Bank of Canada,
Finance Minister E. N. Rhodes announced here tonight. The appointment will take effect as at December
1 and will be for five yean.
It has been arranged, however,
that Mr. Osborne may return to
England before the expiry of hil
CIVIL WAR IS
CERTAINTY IN
THEBALKAKS
Revision of Taxes Is
Cause of Unrest in
Provinces, Cities
GREAT MASSES OF
ARMS SMUGGLED
Yugo People Demand
Return of Terror
Gang for Trial
BY CHARLES M. MEI8TER
(Assocli/d Preu Foreign Staff)
VIENNA, Oct, 26 (AP).—Poll-
tlcal tensity throughout Auitrli,
bringing dire forecast! of new
oivll ttrlfe, Increaied tonight ai
the government proclaimed new
legislation regulating fixation
right! of the federal, provlncltl
and municipal government!.
Chancellor  Kurt  Schuschnlgg'i
ctblnet stirred up in old hornets'
nut by taking from the province!
and municipalitiei their right to
ahare In tixei collected In Vlanni.
Conflict betwun the  heimwehr
(Fatclit homi guityi) htided by
Prince Ernst von Btarhemberg and
Schutchnlgg'i   Catholic   atorm
troopi reached the point of open
dishes it Innsbruck tnd Graz.
A recent editorial in "Die Bund*
espolizi" (organ ot the national po
lice)   prophesied  a final  decislvi
battle for power in Austria befon
(Continued on Ptgt Ten)
FRUIT MARKET
SCHEMEMOVES
Marketing Board Is
Wefl Advanced on
Tree Board Plan
VICTORIA, Oct 28 (CP).-Mtr-
ketlng plans were developing rapidly before the provincial marketing
board today, with a number or
schemes In varioui stages of sub"
mission. That of the interior tret
fruit board, for provincial regulation of domestic sales, was farthest
advanced, after conferences between
memben of the board and the pro-
vincialbody this week. W. E. Raskins, chairman of the interior tree
fruit board, was expected to place
a completed scheme in the handa of
the provincial officials shortly.
Fraser valley milk producen will
have a further hearing with tht
provincial board on Monday; while
on Tuesday, B.C. sheen breeders wlll
spetk to plans they nave for market regulations on live stock.
Vancouver Island houthouse tomato growen have withdrawn a
tentative marketing scheme for revision and further discussion, after
a contested application made thli
week. Three barrister! were endeavoring to reach agreement on
the plan.
SHE IS A MOTHER
AT AGE OF 14
ter-i as deputy governor "If he can
conveniently be
ister said.
conveniently be released," the miu*
"It is the view of the government,'
said Mr. Rhodes, "thtt Ctntda is
(Contlnutd on Ptgt Tan)
HE WAS IM THE RIGHT
PUCE AT RIGHT TIME
MONTREAL, Oct 26 (CP)-Alex
Milne owei his life to the fact that
he happened to be in hospital when
an abscess wu ruptured in his
stomach. The slightest delay, doc-
ton said, ia fatal in tuch cases.
Milne wu visiting his sister when
he collapsed, and a successful operation wu performed.
HELD MAN WAS NOT
HUNTED KIDNAPPER
SALT  LAKE CITY,  Oct 26-
(CP)—A 14-year-old mother and
her ion wire reported "doing nicely" todiy tt t local hospital. Tht
mother li Mrs. Ralph Ivie of Dus-
cheine, Utih. Her child wu delivered by t ciesirlan opentlon.
The huibind li 10 yttn older
thin the child-mother.
MRS. LATTA, WIFE OF
FORMER SASKATCHEWAN
MINISTER, DIES, REGINA
REGINA, Oct 28 (CP)—Mn. S. J.
Latta, wife of the former Sukatche-
wan minister of education, is dead
here. Mrs. Latta was believed to
have been recovering a few dtyt
tgo.
Mr. Latta was tppolnted commli»
lioner ot the bureau of publication
just t few houn before hi! wile'l
detth.   	
THE WEATHER
(Continued on Pigt Tin)
/
PICHER, Okla., Oct 26 (AP)-
Police today investigated the possibility that a young man arrested
here might be Thomas Robinson Jr.
\ anted for the Stoll kidnapping at
Louisville, but a check disclosed
that his description did not fit that
of Robinson as given out by the
department ot justice.
TRAVELS ACROSS CANADA TO
ATTEND DAUGHTER'S FUNERAL
WINDSOR, N.S., Oct. 26 (CP).-
Givtn Elliott, prominent British
Columbia lumberman, today reached the end of a transcontinental
Journey to attend the funeral of his
daughter, Catherine, who died in
hospital here last Saturday.
Victoria
Nanalmo .
Mn.
44
....   88
Vancouver  - ——■■ 88
Atlln -   W
Kamloops    —_....-. to
prince George  —•• 30
Prince  Rupert   - 88
Estevan Point  -  64
Spoksne       _..„...'..-. 42
portlind      - **-
Seattle   46
Sin Franciico •••-   J8
Pentlcton    ~ —  37
Cranbroox ...._. - - 3'
Nelson  —  tt
Vernon  - ...._ —- 83
Cilgiry     -  'i{
Idmonton  -  30
Qu'Appelle  28
Swift Current -  30
Winnipeg  30
Moose Jaw   -■- 32
Dswson   32
Prince Albert   34
Mlg
40
60
60
36
40
43
48
48
64
64
66
78
48
60
38
44
40
60
44
44
26
39
	
_________________
 •■•■■•••••••■■■••-■•■•••^
PAGE TWO-
THI NELSON DAILY NEWI   NEUON. l.C—SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. P. 1M4
Upton Sinclair and His Epic Plan Have
Thrown Scare Into California Industry
Election Day, Nov. 6,
Will Tell the
Tale
(ly Central Press Canadian)
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct JS. -
What will happen in California on
November 6 is living politically inclined Americana much to worry
about On that day, Ctlifornians
will go to the polls to elect a new
governor. In doing so they must
alio  supply  a  yard-rule  fw  aU
Sales
®
Service
BE PREPARED
with
PRESTONE
Don't let • real cold
night catch you unawares
FILL UP TODAY WITH
EVER READY
PRESTONE
The Perfect Anti-Freeie
Phone 117
Kootenay
Motors
(Ntlson)   Llmltsd
Upton Sinclair . . . ex-Soclallit . . . Democratic candidate for
governorship of California . . . eonflicationlst . . . slngle-taxer . . ,
left-winger.
United Slates to use tn measuring
the size and spread ot new radicalism preached by political reformers
Guide for Travellers
NeUon, B. C, Hotels
"Finest in the Interior"
The HUME HOTEL
phoni m
Breakfast 25c to 60c
Luncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c
Rotary and Gyro Headquarters
Tree But Service Nelson B.C. Oaorga Benwell, Prop.
HUME—A. 3. Ironside, Cranbrook;
F. Ust, 8. Chatwin, K. S. McOlll.
B. w Buchanan, W. P. Frant, vanoouver; R. Milton, Montreal; M. Mr-
Lean, Toronto; A. 8. wattleld, C. A.
Tula,  W.   E.  Lawrenoe,  R.   Fraaer,
Pentlcton; H. Coursay, O. Sibley,
Medicine Hat; Bishop of Kootenay,
Vernon; A. O. Low, Calgary; H. Ross,
Reno mine; H. V. Dawson, Recoma;
A. O. Dlsroslers, Procter.
^The Savoy Hotel
"Where the Guest Is Kin&"
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms Wttb Private
Baths or Showers.
J. A. KERR, Prop.
124 BAKER ST. PHONE 19 NELSON, B.C.
BAVOT—». Alpsen, Nakusp; How
ard Rogers, calgsry; E. McNelllle,
Maybaln, Saak.; P. Stutt, Kellhtm,
Alta.; J. A. Fisher, Gerrard; Mrs.
W. E. Russel, Slocan CUy; Mrs. McKlnnon, Mr. and Mrs, J. J. Scott,
Alnsworth;   j.   K.  Bergman,   Orsnd
I.
Forks; Bill Zoyttoff, Brilliant; Albert Palrleer, Romeo Laros«, Shell
River. Sask.; John Marsden, Lardo;
M. McDonald. B. Andretta, Trail;
Mr. and Mrs. H. Lang. Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Sulrdolr, r. s. Ahue, Vancouver.
Madden Hotel
A Welcome Awaits You
MS.   E.  MADDEN
Completely   Remodelled
Hot  and  Cold   Hater
ln  tht  UEAKT of tht City
Now Orand Hotel
F.   L   KAPAK,   Prop.
Weekly and Monthly Rates
Hot and  Cold  Water
Simla SOo op     Doublt 11.90 up
Rooma «I0 a Montb Mid Up
Occidental Hotel
70S Vernon St Phont S87L
II.   WASSICK
SPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES
Good Comfortable Rooms
Minerr Head .uartert
QUEEN'S HOTEL
A. LAPOINTE, Prop.
Rooms from Ho to 11.50
Monthly 110 and up.
Steam heated and hot and cold
water ln every room
«05 Baker SU Phont w
Vancouver, B. C, Hotels
niwlv   Jwu^Aweuvn will-     „;0NM
RENOVATED 0111161*111  HOtel      •***-EVAT0«
A, Paterton, late of Coleman, Alta., Prop. aOO StymourSt- Vtncouvtr
TRANSPORTATION-Frsight and Passenger
SO I CHANGED
TO OREYHOUND
• • . became I can travel by luxurious coaches from
Trail er Nelion to Vernon, or Kamloopi, In one day. And
the Week-End Excursion rate from Trail or Nelion to
Vernon ii only $10.00.
Central Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ud.
AGENTS IN EVERY TOWN
NELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND
^itrvS1015    FREIGHT LINE
Leaving Nelson
at > s.m.
Phone      ■>• C* "SCOTTY" MUIR. prop. phoM
Nelson      prompt   efficient   servics Trail
77
AT  ALL  TIMES
13 or 191
17 Students Looking
for Girl Friends
TORONTO, Oct It (CP)-C. R.
Ellia, editor of the Varsity, University of Toronto's daily newspaper,
wu shocked today to find In hla
mall bas • monster application for
girls. The application waa accompanied by • request that it be forwarded to tht university's student
'date bureau."
Written neatly op • ltrft place
of birchbark, the messast said 17
forestry studerta from an Algon-
quln park station would come "out"
fo one night, November 13, and
would like 17 {iris.
The men wtre described as two
Englishmen, one v/stterner, one
nature photographer, one Lapp, ont
six-footer, several farmers and one
"Clark Gable."
FERNIE CONCERT
PROVES SUCCESS
FERNIE, B.C., Oct, It—Fernie
cititens turned out again to support
a local Interest. A concert sponsored by the Ladies aid of the
United cburch attracted an audience
that tilled the I.O.O.F. hall. The
arogram included vocal solos by
[its Helen Podblelanclk, F. Alexander, William Riley, J. Riley, P.
Benn and C. W. Owen, chorus by
seven of Miss Podblelanclk's pupils,
saxophone solo, Dick Vernon; piano
duet, Edith Rewers and Lorraine
Nolan; mouth-organ selections, Henry Cerkirk; accordion selections, F.
Fzetland; Scotch dances, Thomu
Stewart and a number of conjuring
tricks by H. Harrison of Hillcrest.
SELLERS AGAIN HEADS
FEDERAL GRAIN
as a further step towards prosperity
which the new deal promised, and
has not yet achieved.
Figure of radicalism In California
is Upton Sinclair of Pasadena,
novelist and Socialist convert to the
Democrat party, whost plan for
complete recovery ln California hu
been spread far and wide over the
southern state under the title EPIC
—"End Poverty in California."
Sinclair won Democratic nomlna*
tlon for the governorship by trouncing his nearest opponent ln the
state primary, New Deal Appointee
Creel by over 1,500,000 votes, yet no
man since William Jennings Bryan
has so outraged the vested interests.
But the vested interests, thost
whose investments in the state are
greatest, hold themselves personally
responsible for smashing Upton Sinclair and his EPIC plan. They hate
him as a platform genius who rakes
their interest without stint or reserve. They hate him as a Socialist,
as a labor left wing sympathizer.
Thoy hato him u a single taxer, but
they hate him most of all because
he intimates tht desirability of confiscating private property for tht
good of the state and its workers.
ADV0CATE8 BARTER
Before Upton Sinclair appeared as
a threat on California's political
horizon he sat down and wrote a
startling pamphlet visualising himself in tls position he aoon may
hold. "I, Governor of California and
How I Ended Poverty," he called it.
It was a forceful presentation of his
EPIC plan. Mostly it advocated uae
of the ancient barter idea but with
the state as agent It uld theoretically, "I, Governor Sinclair have
made it legal to appropriate vacant
and idle land for unemployed to
cultivate, to 'acquire' factories
standing Idle, for workleas laborers
to operate: to issue scrip for barter
In place of the money now scarce
and bonds to pay for mv appropriated land and factories. I have
abolished the sales1 tax, tax on
homes and ranches with less than
$3000 assessment. Instead I have
placed heavy taxes on inheritances.
Incomes, (there the vetted interests
noted with alarm) public utilities,
banks, unimproved land, and have
handed pensions to widows with dependent children, to invalids and
Sersons of three-year residence over
) years old."
The EPIC plan was greeted with
fanatical enthusiasm by red hot
radical groups, but not without the
"upport of thousands of unemployed
ind moderately inclined depression
uffcrers could it have carried Sin-
lair to the nomination. From the
inform* he sways audiences with
.is oratory. He was a Socialist, but
Socialism, he said, was getting htm
■Where. He therefore became i
•emocrat.
I8TURBS WASHINGTON
From Washington brain trusters
of Ihe new deal watched with disturbed minds their convert. They
rushed a compromise candidate into
the breach. The primary swamped
hi»n, to elect Sinclair. The victorious Epicurean marched to Washington, embraced an embarrassed
President Roosevelt, became "close"
friends with political aides of the
chief.
Immediately the party heads decided that he could be "handled,"
could be made lest dangerous. They
placed their seal of approval upon
Upton Sinclair, but ignored his EPIC
plan. Sinclair, home in California,
promptly Issued a ntw pamphlet
"Immediate Epic." It stnt a thrill of
fear through conservative Californians. State, county, district, city
bonds have been sinking in value
ever since. Sinclair intimates $3.-
000.000 to JIO.OOO.OOO levy on utilities
ond Industrial corporations at once,
to prime his EPIC pump, to start
Immediately his round of reopening
factories, and doing business with
tax receipt scrip and tht barter
policy. Three years after promulgation of the scheme, California will
vote to make it permanent or to
wreck it So Sinclair proposes.
His new impetus makea old-line
politicians shudder. Delay was their
hope. Sinclair is too ready to put
his plans into action. The hugt
question mark looms for November
6. California's voters must then decide lf thty art ready to give Sinclair and tht radicallst theories ht
propounds tht trial a governor's
office would warranL
Wliwn-O, Oct. _8 (CP)—AU officers of the Federal oraln Company, Limited, were returned to offlot at a meetlnt ot directors held
following tht annual general meeting
of the company htrt.
R. 1. Sellers, Winnipeg, waa reelected president and managing director and Alex Thompson. Winnipeg, vice-president. H. J. Symington,
Montreal, wu reelected director.
FERTILIZER
EFFECTS ON
SMALLFRU1T
The memben of the Northwest
Fertilizer conferenoe, rtprtttDtlaf tht
experiment atatloat of waahlngton,
Oregon, Montana, Idaho and British
Columbia approved a number of suggestions regarding tht ust of ftrtll-
lasrs on am'll fruits ln tht northwest. The conference met lut July
IS and 17, at Yakima, Washington.
The tuggeatlona la the use ot fertiliser  on  tht  following  kinds  of
fruit are stt out In this report and
It reads:
CHItftHY
"1. Cherries seem to be susceptible,
on the basis of axptrlmesta and
observations, to Injury exhibited u
yellowing and premature dropping of
leaves following applications of cy.
animid any time during tht dormant seaaon. Dropping of leavea waa
not marked Immediately following
irrigation.
"3. Order ot susceptibility to this
injury It u follows: Bins, Napoleon,
Lambsrt.
"3. Color,
"(A) Plott ln which phosphorus
wu used invariably ltd. A-Iadlvl-
dual frulta were colored; B-rrult
throughout tht thret developed oolor uniformly.
POOREST COLOR
"(B) NK Plot registered poorest
color, a-At Harvest time these treet
showed color ranging from fully colored specimens to frulta showing
light: B-Delayed picking did not
materially Improve color: c-Lam-
berta frulta began to soften and
drop without developing color.
"(C) color of fruit in N plott
Invariably showed poorer than In
plots where P had been added wtth
tht N.
"(D) Size—Theplott ln which sodium nitrate had been used invariably
produced larger fruit than plots
where nitrogen had been left out of
the mixture, sin of cherries, however,- It profoundly Influenced by
the crop born.
"(E) Keeping quality—rrult from
phosphorus treated plou wu firmer
and exhibited bitter handling and
Plenty of "Hot. Stuff" Is
Promised in Stevens Probe
The vocational guidance aervlce,
a semi-official body which helps
children of school-leaving tge to
choose a career, proposes to uat
films illustrating "Industrial psychology" in furtherance of its aims.
Thousands of Letters
Pour Into His
Office
This Is tht tteond ef a tirles
ef two articles en tht forth*
coming session of tht Stevens
prlct probt oommlsslon.
By WILFRED EGGLE8TON
Ctntral Press Canadian Staff Writer
Ottawa, Oct. JJ.—"You ain't heard
nothing ytt!"
Such it a colloquial summing up
ot the broad Mnts which those who
are ln touch with the work of the
Sttvens royal commlulon Inquiring
into Canada's "sweat-shops and
other economic injustices manage
to convey when they are asked
about the sessions which are scheduled to begin about tht end ot this
month.
Investigators have been busy all
aummer and early fall, auditors,
accountants, trained economists, a
small army of thtm going up and
down Canada, gathering together
the facts which will be revealed
to the public when Hon Harry
Stevens resumes the sittings of his
commission.
Why fish landed at the docks
nett tht fisherman a cent a pound
and costs the householder 20 cents
a ftw days later; why farm implements went up when wheat wtnt
down; how much the workers in
Canada's textile mills get, and how
long hourt they work, the retl "low
down" on the mats buying of Canada's chain stores; the spread between the price a farmer gets for
t buktt of tomttoes and the cost
of ctnntd tomttoes, with t few
sidelights on what tht people who
work in the ctnning factories receive; these are some ot the lines
which the paid investigators of the
Stevens commission have bten following.
Of course, they ctn't come out
and tell the scandalous details yet.
but one hears at the capital that
there will be plenty of "hot stuff."
LITTERS BV THI HUNDREDS
It it approaches the sensational
nature of torn, ot tho tobacco and
needle-trades evidence spilled last
spring before the parliamentary
committee, it will again blow the
lid off things, and hold tht centre
of the federtl stage again.
The minister of tradt and commerce certainly released an avalanche with his Toronto speech of
last January.
Almost ovtrnlght ht became a
kind of national hero. People with
grievance! began to write in by
th**? hundreds. Mtnv confirmed his
grave charges tbout industry. They
supplied him with new facts and
new suspicions. They congratulated
him by the hundreds.
These floods of letters still pour
in. People want thia investigated
and that. Everything from the Pacific scandal to the prict of razor
blades. Some ot the letters which
retch Mr. Stevens tre the obvious
product of cranks. But everything
which offert to throw any light on
conditio.is. or which makes charges
of sweat-shop or slavery conditions
Is passed along to tht commission
for Investigation.
CLAMOR FOR OASOLI   I PROBE
Two demands have been made
repeatedly. The public wants the
price of coal investigated. Also they
want to know why gasoline costs
so much. So far the conmmlsslon
has had to resist these demands.
They already hava mort than they
can r .pe to clean up by the time'the
next session starts.
But the clamor for probes Into
8U and coal prices continue. In
it tnd tht pressure may be so
grttt the Inquiry wlil htvt to bt
enlarged.
It hat betn enlarge**.' twlct now.
T t creation ot tht roytl commission uw tht extension of lt to the
subjects ntmed ibove: firm implements, fish, canning of fruits and
vegetables, and so forth.
But there was no mention of textiles.  And  textiles  arc  a  subject
PEARSON
Drafted fram Ottawa's department ef external affairs, L. B.
Pearson formtrly profetsor of economics it Unlvtrslty of Toronto,
took ovtr thi stcrttarythlp tf
tht "brain trust" of thi Steveni
commlulon. Professors Curtis tnd
Bladen alto acted is "brain trusters."
which scores of people wert sure
should be investigated.
In the long run thty prtvalled.
Tht commission htd demurred on
the ground thtt the industry wu
too largt to be tdequately invest-
gated ln the timt available. But
tht public wat not to bt denied
some kind ot Inquiry into textiles.
And they are getting it. Not t tull-
dreu affair like the one which wu
conducted Into Canada't largt department stores. Afttr all, there
are 175 textiles establishments in
Canada. To investigate them all
would cost a small fortune. But
something at lust is to be done.
Three experts tn economics have
been dratted trom the department
of external affairs tor tht work
of the Sttvens commission. L. B.
Pearson, formerly of the University
of Toronto, and one of the brightest minds in the civil service, is the
secretary. Two professors were
b ought In trom outside points. A
skilled indexer wit brought up to
OtUwa for the occuion.
REPORTS BEING PREPARED
This "Brain Trust" has betn buty
tor weeks with the 4000 ptges of
evidence tnd the uveral bushels of
exhibits, sitting, analysing, organising, recommending. They hive
boiled down to two things:
1. What the committee found out
last spring.
2. The possible remedies.
The eleven members of parliament who trt on the leytf commlulon hive been asked to go
through the findings to date. Thty
are being supplied with copies of
the "Brain Trust's" confidential rt'
port. Thty art expected to htvt
clarified thtlr idtu on tht subject
during the recess, tnd to bt ready to
write a prescription for the economic ailments disclosed lut session.
It would be t lot simpl for them
to write their report if thert wasn't
t general election around tht corner.
There ire powerful factions on
both ties. Big business Is annoyed
at some of the things Mr. Stevens has
uid, snd tt tht way in which parts
of the Inquiry have been conducted.
The famous ''Stevens" pamphlet was
binned and dutroyed—with tht result thlt nttrly every Camdim
wis exposed to t copy or more of
It Tht ftmous "sctne which wu
to h'vt rocked Otttwt whtn Mr.
Stevens and tht prime minister
•gain came face to fact collapted
when Mr. Bennett went to Europe.
The Stevens Inquiry wu tried out
in tht little general eltetloi" ln Ontario on Sept. 24, but it seems to have
been a dud. a
keeping quantise,
rldt,  howtver, tend
than do larpt t[
'"OT) Maturity,
nitrogen or potuh tlont or In combinttion whtn applied to young trwt
caused tbt leavet to remtln tntn
and atar on tht trut a maximum
Itngth of time In the fall, with dt-
laytd maturity of wood; B-Touna
tract whtn treated with phoiphorui
matured the wood earlier tnd to a
gruttr degrtt thin treet not treated
with phosphorus, thereby oppoalng
winter injury.
"(O) In Montana nitrogen and
phosphorus art thi element! mott
likely to benefit Blng and Lambert
swtet   cherries.
Hn
"I, nitrogen spptars to bt tht
tint limiting nil tertUltT tutor In
Utt growth and production ot ptin.
"2. Nitrogen may bt supplied preferably by the growth of a good
atand of Itgumluous cover crop ln
the orchard, by the application ot
logumlnoua hay, or msnurtt, or
oommerclal fertilisers.
"S. Whtrt nitrogen It deflolint, u
indicated by trie response approximately three-quarters pound of actual nitrogen mar be annually applied ptr tret ln orcharda when logumlnoua cover crops an not balng
grown. Since color lt not a factor
in fruit quality, greater amounts of
nitrogen may bt tpplied without it-
duolng grtde. In rtglons whtn tht
control ot pttr blight Is a problun,
•xctHlvt imountt of nitrogen may
itlmulatt growth tufleltntly to
gristly incrtut tht lu-mptlblllty ot
tht tmt to thi pur blight organ-
lam.
"k. In orchards whttt nitrogen it
deficient applications of nltrogtn-
oua ftrtillaers ttnd to lneruu vtg-
etttivi vigor, u mtaaiyed by terminal growth, leaf tin color, and
trunk clrcumftrtnot, and to eftict
the crop slightly Improving the ut
and Inortulng Ult tin ind yield of
fruit.
"I. Ixptrlmenttl ivldtnot Indicant no additional direct value for
either p and K togithtr without
nitrogen or ln combination with nitrogen.
"«. Applications of ftrtlllatr htvt
no muaurable affeot upon tht de.
vtiopment ot tht troublt known m
cork ipot.
rtvui
'Of tbt thru fertlllieri (NPK)
applied, nitrogen alone gtvt dependable -multi. Nltrogtn incnutd
growth to torn extant. Thlt wu flrtt
noted ln mon vlgoreut shoot growth,
thtn Ui a largir numhte of growing
polnti. Nltrogtn alto toemid to lncreau flrmnttt tf tht fruit.
"Alfalfa cover crop lntrtutd ylildi
ind It recommended when tht
water aupply ll adequate. Alfalfa
seemt to bt mort btniflelal than Inorganic aourou of nitrogen.
SMALL FRUITS
"Humut or organic matter It generally lacking from mineral tolla ot
wutern wuhlngton. Thlt difleWney
Umitt tht profltablt production of
■mall frulta on tuch toils, prior
to pltntlng of tuch cropt, tollt Othtr
thtn muck and put ahould bt
built up by tppllcttion of firm
minuret or by growing itgumlnoui
manun cropt.
"1. Rupberrles and bltckbtrrlei.
"(A) Apply U or M poundi ef
phosphoric told ln addition to e
to 13 toni of barnyard manure or
t to e tont of poultry litter per
ten soon after thi planta havt become dormant.
"(Bl Bow Ul ttrly fall, about September 1, a gtwn manun ef hairy
vetoh and winter whut or othtr
quick growing crop. Flow undtr whtn
about two fett high er ln my etu
by April 16.
"(C) when manure U not available commercial firtllleera may be
applied. Ixptrlmintil evidence
throughout the united Statu Indicates that as a rule nltrogtn and
phosphorus are the only aliments
to which tuch crops show a men-
uriblt retponse.
"2.  StrtwberrlM.
"(A) strawberries occupy 1 glvtn
piece of ground for • relatively ihort
time. Building up of soil fertility by
application ot farm msnurtt, growing ot green manure cropt, or by
crop rotation prior to planting la
mott economical.
APPLY PHOSPHORIC ACID
" (B) Slnoe nltrogtn tnd phoiphorui an tht mwt Uktly limiting
ticton ot toll fertility, etttbllthed
pttchtt wlll usually btnttlt by:
A-Annuil application ot at to 85
pounda of phosphoric aeld In addition to * to a tana of well rotted
ttr mmanure; B-If manures art
net available, apply ln tht aprlng
SO to to poundi of nltrogtn ud 40
to 80 poundi of phosphoric told. If
potuh lt thought to bt deficient
90 to 60 poundi of thli element miy
be idded; C-In lrrlgited districts
of Euta-m wuhlngton early ftU
tppllcttion ot fertlllieri It utlitic-
tory.
"Mat ind much tollt an usually
well supplied with nltrogtn but mty
be deficient In phosphorus ind pot-
.POSITS AT FEME
MEAN NEW INDUSTRY
Pottery Company Makes Tests and Product
Is Satisfactory; Deposits Extend
Four Miles; Ample Supply
By O. V. STAINSBY
FERNIE, B.O, Ott 2»- Cin
Ptrnlt find e stunt if revenue
In tht ground apart fram Itt WlIT
Thirt tra Indlcttlont thtt thlt It
poulbli tlthtugh ntt In tht lint
unu thit hu bun trut tf Its
mlnu.
ftr tomt tnt thtn mty bt t
modinti  Incomt fnm tht tlty
dtposltt thtt tbtund In thit neighborhood.   Tinglble   evidence   tn
thlt pottlblllty un bt ittn In a
numbtr tf bowlt thet in tn dlipliy In I loctl dtptrtmtnt tttn.
Ne effort hts bttn mtdt u ytt to
ittun thut goodt In tommtreltl
qutntltlu tnd thtn in ntnt ftr
ult but thty tuggtst tht htpt thlt
in unttuehid loctl ruourei mty
bt turntd te profit
Somt tlmt tgo Wlllltm Short-
house showed t sunplt ot tht city
to t traveller for pn Albert! pottery
comptny. Tht trtvtlltr wu inttr-
ested tnd tent It to tht fictory to
tut IU biking qutlltles. It ctmt
back btked tnd glutd tnd of a
hardntu thtt resisted htnuntr blows
to which tt wu subjected to tut
IU ttrtngth. Lut winter Thomu
Shorthouse Sr. mouldtd t vtry tr-
tittle tobtcco jar and stnt It to tbt
factory to be finiihtd. It s tmong
tht irticlet now on dlsplty btked,
glued tnd btiutifully colored.
COMPANY INTERESTED
Tht compiny thlt hid bun doing tht fitting btttmt luffltltntly
Intirttttd   te  tlk  ftr e   lirger
eimplt. Thlt wu tint and from It
ctmi tht bowlt In whlth Ptrnlt
tltlstnt en Intirattid tt tht prat-
tnt tlmt. Somt if thl trtleltt trt
mede intlrtly fnm tht (tttl mi-
ttrltl and umt in mlkid with
ethtr tlty. Ptr tpptinnu tnd
ttrtngth thl Ptrnlt product ttandt
up wtll. A bowl mint frant Ptrnlt
ind  tetkitthiwin tltyt mlxtd,
howtvir, It thi eholot irtlelt tf
tht lot tnd rings es olurly et t
bill. Tht only dsfiett thtt tpptir
In tny tf tht ertlolu in tuth u
wtuld   naturally  bt  tllmlntted
through bttttr tcquilnUnct with
tht pr ptrtltt ef tht tlty.
Thtre trt sound reuoni tor hoping that good use mty bt made oi
thlt natural resource, Regardleu ot
the extent to which it mty ultimately bt utilised In utsntils IU
suitability for vetrlfled Ult hu already  bttn  imply  demonstrtttd.
Tht supply htrt should bt able to
compete on rgtsomble ttrmt with
thost now ln Use. Tht potteries tre
in Albert! but they obtain their raw
materiel   f.1>m   Sas litchewan   is
they htvt no loctl supplies.
MAY Bl SUPIRIOR
It, u seems to be the cut, a superior article can ba produced by a
mixture there ihould be t demand
for the Pernio city. In ftct, one of
tht pottery conipanlu writing to
Mr. Shorthoutt made the satement
that tht dtpotita might be used to
•dvanUge.
Quite recently the Alberta potteries entered the eastern field and
are shipping to Ontario msrkets.
Some ot the bentfiU of thU enlarged
trade mty be brought to Fernie lt
tufficitnt well-directed tfforU trt
mtdt to stcure thtm. Tht loctl de-
posiU extend tor several miles and
thtn stems to bt no quutlon of in
tmplt supply for a long timt.
24 NEW NAMES ON
MUNICIPAL UST
Householders and Licensees
Hive Until End of Month
to Get .on List
Six mort ntw namei htvt bun
idded to thi munlclpil voten' Hit
tt tht elty hill llnet wednetdty,
thtn now btlng st ntw unw
potted up. Only householders or
llctnuu who win not on the lltt
lut yur, but who in tllglblt to
vote thlt ytar. need ttkt a declaration, all othar who havt paid thtlr
Uut automatically go on the Hit
Kouttholden tnd llctnuu htvt until tht ind of tht month to gtt on
tht Utt.
Biihop Adams to Hold
Confirmation Services
Blthop Wtlttr Adams, Bishop et
Kootensy srrlvtd In Nelson Fridiy
mornlni. He wll officiate at thru
servioM it Church ot Bedumir
Sundiy, conflrmitlon urvlcw being
held In tht tvtnlng.
,     li   UL*!,      (Ol      I
I   I   ,'I<1
BURGESS
BATTERIES
CIVF.
MOST   POWER
AND
1  LAM  1 ONUKR
fltJItGI "iS
Burgtu
Dry telle
llultt-
Wiaalfef
T
•eMey
Dtt Itn
A herd of 70S buffalo bought in
1907 by Canada and Introduced In
the Fort Smith district of the northwest, now numbtr more thtn 17,000.
The animals ire protected by the
Dominion of Cantda.
CHRISTMAS SAILINGS
To tkt OLD COUNTRY
TAKE advantage ol (educed Itra to mike
.  '   thtt long-promised trip  Splendid accom-
nedtlloni ire available In ill ciuses.
IFROM SAINT JOHN AND HALIFAX
'See, 1. Ducheaa ol York lot Glastow, Itlfut tl
Llvtrpool.
•Pet. II. Duehett  ol  Richmond  lor  Havre  rat
Southampton.
"Dtt. 14, Duchttt ol Atholl lor Glgtgow, Btliott
Liverpool .
•Ptt.ll Monixoae lor Oloatow, Btllaal, llvtrpool
•Sulla Ina Holilat doy lollowlntj
tm funbti infrroiti,*** «pptv mmt local tpttt **( »*'.< tltuttt
H. |. wwn
QlY Ticket Heart     •     Ntlton. I. C
CANADIAN PACIFIC
 ^—
	
,VWM
IM
• THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934■
•PAOI THRU
Oty? (Hfttrrffea Ktf ®^n fur Itoralfip
S"l maa glaii mljrtt tftrg mill untn mr.
Crt na go intu tyr fotur of tltt tort)."
Pa. cxxn i.
St. ftrolair'a (Eljurrfj
Ijarupat ^anksghrtng
8:00 a.m.   Holy Communion.
11:00 a.m.   Matins and Holy Communion.
(The children of the Sunday School
witt attend the morning service—
No Sunday School chutes.)
7:30 p.m.   Evensong.
Kottrmbrr let. illjiiraltag, Ml §atntn'
7:00 a.m.   Holy Communion.
{Trinity
Uttitri CEIjurrl]
of (Hauaita
W. C. Mawhlnney, Mlnllter
I 10:00 ajn.—Church School
I 11:00 am-"MIN LIKE MOUNTAINS."
7:30 p.m.-~"PATHI OF PROGRESS."
Monday, 8 p.m.—Service Club,
Mri. A. C. Emory, 220 Victoria Street.
Tueaday, 3 pjn—United W.M.S.
tn St. Paul's Church.
firat
Presbyterian
(Elntrrl?
Mlnlater: Rev. Wallace McClean
10:00 ajn.—Sabbath School
11*00 am.—"Backbone!"
7:30 pjn.—"Men ai Treei."
The weekly meeting ot the WA.
will be held at the home of Mrs.
H. H. Currie, 822 Baker St., on
Thurdsay, Nov. 1 at 3 p.m.
QHjttrrlj of
®lj* JUtom* r
W. J. Silverwood, Vicar
Sunday School 10:45 a.m.
Holy Communion  8 and 11 a.m.
Confirmation  Service   7.30 pjn.
The Bishop of tbe Dioceae,
Biihop Adams, wlll officiate and
preach at all services.
et. $aula
ttuitrfc (Hljurrl?
Rev T. J. S. Ferguaon, B.A.
Mlnllter
10 i.m—Sundiy School Rally
11 ajn. and 7:30  p.m.—Public
Wonhlp.
Morning Theme: "The Value of
Thanksgiving and Praise."
Evening Theme:  "The Armour
That Gives Victory."
Monday, 8 p.m.—Excelaior Club
at Mrs. W. A. Talbot's, rair-
view.
Sunday,   Nov.   4 — Anniversary
Gueet   Preacher,   Rev.   H.
Ashford of India.
Monday,   Nov.   5—Anniversary
Turkey Supper.
Tueeday-Unlted W.M.S. in St.
I      Paul'i vestry.
Youths Give Up Cigarettes
So That Russians May Read
Government Can't Keep Pace With Demand
for Books in Soviet; Boom
Takes Place in Moscow
ON TH* AIR TONIGHT
IS YMIR GUEST
.    YMIR. B.C., OcL 28-Mri. Han-
aon had as her guest her daughter,
' Mrs. Woolers, of Wild Horse camp.
Ymir school has remained closed
because of the diphtheria cases.
S. A. Curwen was a Nelson visitor.
Mr. Jarvis visited Nelson.
Snow has covered the ground
here most of the week.
Andrew Burgess was a Nelson
visitor.
Y-ilr is soon to be wired for electric lights.
Mrs. Carl Nystrom, who has been
on the sick list, is improving.
ftnt
laptiat Olintrrii
Herbert W. Guscott, Minister
11:15 ajn—GOD'S  MINORITY.
7:30 pjn.-FORGETFULNESS.
Soloist: Mrs. J. M. Mac-
Lean of Vancouver.
10:30 am—Church School.
If you have no church home
worship with us.
Jirat (Eljurrlf ni
(Eljrtst $rir nttat
*    Ut BAKER STRUT
A branch of Uie Mothei Church
The   First   Church   of   Christ
Scientipi in Boston, Mass.
Sunday School 0:40 ajn.
Sunday Service 11 ajn.
Sub leet Lesion Sermon
"PROBATION AFTIR DEATH"
Wednesday Tesiunonial Meeting
S pjn.
FRIt READING ROOM IN
CHURCH   BUILDING-
AM Cordially Welcome
INDIANS PLANNED
TURN ENEAS IN
So States  Joseph  Ceorge  In
Coast Case; Says Carr
Drew Cun
CANADIAN RADIO
COMMISSION NITWORK
6:00 Acadian Serenade
8:30 Harveit Hoedown,  Toronto
7:00 Prog, of the Nations
7:30 Charlei Dornberger's orch.
7:45 News and Weather Forecast
8:00 Melody Moodi
8:30 Music Book Shelf, Calgary
8:30 Newi (B.C. Net)
8:45 Norris Brothers Trio
9:00 Vernon String Trio
N.B.C.KPO NITWORK
Radio City Party
The Gibson Family.
Danny Malone, tenor (KHQ)
Siberian  Singers
National Barn Dance
Floyd Gibbons
Carefree Carnival
Blue Moonlight ^L
Tom Coakley's orch.
Press-Ridlo News
Orville Knapp's orch.
Fio-Rito's orch.  (KPO, KFI)
Dwlght Johnson's orch.
Organ Concert (KPO)
C.B.S.D0N Lit NITWORK
8:00 Grete Stueckgold, Andre Kos-
telanetz, orch.
7:00 Band dir.; Edward D'Anna
7:30 Saturday Revue
8:00 Richard Himber'i Champions
6:30 Benjamin Franklin, drama
9:00 Orchestra
SUNDAY NIGHT
6:00
6:30
7:30
7:45
00
9:00
9:13
10:00
10:30
10:55
11:00
11:00
11:30
11:30
8:45 Harry Leifer, pianist, Winnipeg
(Exc. CRCV)
9:00 Prairie Pastorale
9:30 Frank Chapman, tenor
9:45 Phyllis Trenwlrth, soprano
N.B.C.KPO
8:00 Manhattan  Merry-Go-Round
6:30 Album of Familiar Music
7:00 Hall of Fame
7:30 Jane Froman. Modern choir:
Orch. Don McNeill, m.c.
8:00 Wendell Hall, Music Maker
8:15 To be announced
8:30 Jack Benny, Mary Livingstone,
Frank Parker, Orch.
9:00 Silken Strings, Orch.
9:30 The Philistine. (KPO, KFI)
9:30 Coakley's Orch., (KGO to Net
9:43 Souvenirs, E.T. (KPO)
10:00 News Flsshes
10:15 PoliUcal talk, (KPO)
10:15 Bridge to Dreamland
10:30 Slmon'i  >rch. (KPO, KOA)
11:00 Press-Radio newi
11:05 Midnight Melodies (KPO)
11:05 Tom Gerun'i Orch.
STRIKE IS HADE
ON UTICA MINE
KASLO, B.C., Oct 26-Believed
to be an important itrlke the high
grade ore shoot sought all summer
at the Utica mine, hu been encountered, says the Kootenalan. F.
Pardoc Wilson, manager, was at thn
coast at the time and wu wired
the news. It Is believed the mine
will be operated throughout the
winter.
The Kootenalan also reports that
WUUam M. Orr, who with associates,
operates a, placer claim on Hall
creek, brought in five ounces of
what is aald to be the best looking
gold ever brought to Kaalo. It was
aU course gold, one nugget being
worth |«.30. The claim hu about 40
feet of sluice boxes.
CRC
:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
TV
00
30
8:30
Footllght Highlights, Toronto
Pastel Panels, Reglna
Ottawa Temple choir
Leopold Monn. pianist
News and weather forecast
Atlantic Nocturne, Halifax
Isaac Mamott, Wilfred Davis,
Irene Fairfield (exc. B.C.)
News (B.C. Net)
CBS-DON LSI
6:00 Town Crier
6:30 Salon Moderne (Dan Lee)
6:30 Danny Russo's Orch.
7:00 Wayne King's Orch.
7:30 Tile Merrymakers (Don Lee)
8:30 JL.eon Belasco's Orch.
8:30 Hal Grayson's Orch. (DL)
9:00 Red Nichols and Orch.
9:00 Hi Jinks (D.L.)
9:30 Frank Dalley's Orch.
10:00 Frank Jenk's Orch. (D.L.)
10:15 Joe Sullivan, pianiit (D.L.)
10:30 Vincent Lopez's Orch. (D.L.)
11:00 Dick Jergens' Orch. (D.L.)
11:30 Midnight Moods (Don If e)
Calmer R. Griffith of Hiawatha.
Utah, recently caught a rainbow
trout weighing 23'i pounds and
measuring 41 inches in length and
18 Inches in girth, in a stream near
hla home.
-  DODD'S
^KIDNEY
k PILLS ,
< l lt>xxxVD'st,/
LL Kiom
%J •__* He ii M__T i*.. Hi i./
HARROP LADY1S
GIVEN FAREWELL
Mrs. j. F. Stevenson Guest of
Honor at Women's Institute Affair
Fairview
Fuel Co.
MIDLAND COAL:
Lump  ~ 10.50
Stovt       f9.00
STANDARD
LETHBRIDGE:
Lump   flO.50
Stow      18.00
HILLCREST:
Lump    f 10.00
Carload  Pricei  on
Application
PHONE 701
HARROP, B.C., Oct. 28-Honor-
ing Mrs. J. F. Stevenson Thursday
members of Harrop Women's institute entertained tor her at a tea
at thi home of Mrs. W. J. McConnell.
Mra. H. Fairbank presented the
honored guest with a gift from the
members in recognition of services
u president of the local institute
as well as a parting remembrance,
as Mrs. Stevenson leaves on Sunday
with her husband to spend the winter with Mr. Steven' >n's mother,
Mra. G. M. Stevenson, at Victoria.
Recovering her surprise. Mrs. Stevenson expressed her thanks and
appreciation for the thought and
gift.
Thoae present were Mrs. Stevenson, Mrs. Fairbank, Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Mrs. J. Berry, Mrs. F. Andrews,
Mrs. J. Mackereth, Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie, Mrs. L. Howard of San Francisco, Mrs. I. Sparks, Mrs. W. S.
Ashby, Mrs. F. Littlebury ot Char-
nage, England, Miss Katherine Ran-
ton of Nelson, Mrs. C. S. Price. Mrs.
R. Quln, Mrs. R. G. Pooe, Mrs. E.
Harrop. Miss Sadie Mcintosh and
Mrs. McConnell.
Ten carloads of friends ot M*.
and Mrs. R. Stevenson, who were
recently married in Nelaon, gave
them a charivari Thursday on thjjr
return home from a short honeymoon. The toast to the bride was
proposed by Mrs. L. C. Piper, and
the same honor was extended the
groom by H. Falrbank.
The new zoo in Paris, France, Is
said to be one of the lrrgest .ind
most complete in the world. It
covers 33 acres in the heart of the
Bois de Vincennes. It Is larger than
the London. Amsterdam, or Antwerp zoos and contains 2000 animals, including specimens from
every part of the globe.
OJljtiatmas Apples
For GREAT BRITAIN
We wUI deUver for you to any address in England, Scotland,
Wales or Northern Ireland, a box of specially selected and
packed O.K. Apples. These arc picked and packed whUe in their
prime and cold stored until shortly before Christmas when
delivery wUI be made.
■ PER BOX
DELICIOUS . . .
NEWTOWNS . .$
McINTOSH RED ^
JONATHAN ,1
Extra Fancy Special Pack  (Xmas Wrapped)
Orden muit reach our office not later than Nov. 25th, accompanied by remittance at par in Nelion. Namei and addresses
ihould be typed or plainly printed.
Associated Growers of B.C. Limited
NELSON, B.C.
VANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP)-The
three slwash brothers of Eneas
George had agreed, before police
appeared at the Canford reserve to
arrest the Indian, to take him to
Merritt, B.C., the foUowlng day in
connection witb the wounding of
his wife, Joseph George testified
today when he appeared in the appeal of his brothers against conviction of the murder of Dominion
Constable F. H. Gisbourne.
British Columbia court of appeal
is hearing Joseph'i itory ot events
leading up to slaying of Gisbourne
and Provincial Constable Percy Carr
on May 23 before deciding on a
moUon of Defence Counsel Stuart
Henderson to Introduce his evidence
in support of the appeal.
Richard, Eneaa and Alex. George
were under sentence to hang today
but they have been granted a reprieve to February 27.
Through an Interpreter, Joseph
told the court he had core to the
Canford reserve from Coldwater,
B.C., on account of Eneas' small
children and after hearing that
Eneas and his wife were in trouble.
He said he met Eneas' wife u she
wu being conveyed to Merritt and
aaid she told him that Eneas had
hurt her.
Eneai' three brothers stayed close
beside him because Eneas wu downhearted, Joseph stated.
In the afternoon of May 23, the
brothers made repairs to a fence
near Spence's Bridge, B.C., he testified and, after agreeing to take
Eneas to Merritt the next day, they
decided to return to Chief Billys
house on the reserve. It was quite
dark, Joseph said.
This led to the meeting with Gisbourne and Carr on the reserve that
nlfht
Joseph testified that, u they came
to the houae, they saw Gisbourne
carrying a flaihlight and going very
fut, and that Gisbourne said, "I
want En&s."
Richardson, the witness stated,
answered, "Who sent you?" to which
Gisbourne allegedly replied. "Mr.
Barber" (Indian Agent A. H. Barber of Merritt).
Joseph stated that Richardson
then said, "If you want Eneas we
will deliver him to you tomorrow."
"There and then, ne (Gisbourne)
reached out to take hold of Eneas,"
Joseph testified. "He put his light
down on the ground. He reached in
hii rear pocket and pulled out a
small gun. He handled It with both
hands, wu likely loading it I heard
a noise, the report ot a gun, and
after that I don't remember any
more."
The Indians wert Juat "standing
there" at the time, Joaeph stated ln
aniwer to a question ot Mr. Justice
A. E. McPhiUips, and they did not
have any sticks or weapons.
Joeeph ii alao charged with,the
murder ot Gisbourne but he has not
yet been tried becauae of injuries
suffered on the night the constables
were slain. He hu been deaf but
hu partially recovered hli hearing.
Jack Raper Visits
Kaslo
KASLO, B.C.. Oct. 26-Jack Paper
of Johnson's Landing wu a city
visitor Tuesday.
George Abey, wh had been confined to his home by illness, Is out
again.
Malcolm Greenlaw ot Lardo was a
recent city visitor.
Owing to inclement weather the
Kulo Liberal association meeting
scheduled for Monday evening dld
not take place, necessitating an executive meeting which wu held
st the home of the secretary Wednetday. All memben of the executive committee were in attendance
md important business wu disposed of pending the November
meeting.
W. M. Orr hu lett for Ml home
in Howser after spending a few
dayi In town.
M. Romenak of Deer Park wu a
vliitor here.
A TRIP TO RUSSIA
Wlfa of Pierre van Piauen, noted European mwipapir correspondent, and an experienced journalist In hir own right, Coral«
van Paassen, Nelion Dally News European corretpondent, It visiting Ruula, Om of hir series of articles deKMblng vividly whit,
the leu there, follow. The artlclu are written Tn an Informal
way from material gathered from penonil contact with thi peepli
of the oountry.   Don't mlu a tingle one.
(Flnt of a Serin)
By CORALIE VAN PAASSEN
Central Preu Canadian Writer
MOSCOW,  Oct.  28.-So  this is
Moscow?
The gray sky, laden with heavy
rainciouds, which hung over the
flat, monotonous landscape at which
I had been looking through the
carriage window since the first
streaks of dawn, answered exactly
to the mental picture I had formed
myself ot Russia. But that was all.
Nothing else came even remotely
near the preconceived notions which
I had on the most-talked-of city in
the world.
Whei I was whirled away in one
of the 60-odd limousines which
were required to transfer our party
from the Warsaw station to the
Grand .iotel, I Imagined • I had
landed in  some American  boom
-I
There are only 12 women veter
inirims in the United States,
town. Buildings are going up
erywhere, rows upon rows, in all
stages of construction. Batteries of
heavy trucks were roatlng through
the streets. All contained building
material, window frames, door
auhes, radiators, bricks, tarpaper,
tiles for roofs, cement sacks, sheets
of metal, chimney pots, I don't
know what else.
Heavy wine-colored street cars
one motor car and three or four
trailers, Jammed with people, rumbled by. White-gloved cops were
dlrecUng traffic. One of them, who
halted us, I noticed to my surprise
was a tall blonde girl. She walked
over to a truck-driver who had
drawn up a little too far under the
red signal light and gave him a
talking to which made our chauffeur smile. But the offending
truckman duly backed up, believe
me, without so much as a word of
protest, right t- the spot which she
indicated with her club. Then
when the female police officer
looked up and saw us, saw that
a earful of strangers had witnessed
her show of authority, she blushed.
NC CRIME PERIODICAL".
After we had lunch, the sky
cleared and I went out for a stroll.
I don't know the names of the
streets I traversed and it does not
matter. I stopped at the newsstands to see what they had to offer.
No detective stories. No purple
magazines. No crime specials. Nothing but serious books, pamphlets
and periodicals, several of them Illustrated. Do you know that Moscow, among the mass of newspapers and technical journals, prints
a daily magazine of 20 pages devoted exclusively to the theatre and
to new books? I didn't know and
I wu surprised, tor there is not another city in the whole world which
has anything approaching it. And
yet these people here are called
barbarians! •
Several thousand kiosks throughout the city dispense lemonade,
sirups and other kinds ot soft drinks,
This year the flower-stands are an
Innovation. They were doing a
roaring business on violets, asters,
marigolds, dahlias and even roses
Later in the evening I noticed many
young people strolling in the streets
who carried a flower in their button-hole or pinned on their rou-
bashkas. "Are you trying to Imitate
■ the English?" I asked a boy-student
|_9y the name of Koska Pankoff, who
wu kind enough to show me the
way to the Second Moscow Art
theatre in the evening. I wu referring to the gardenia in his coat-lapel.
"Not at all," he uid. "Wc are simply
beginning to make life more beautiful. We take advantage ot every
bit of color to brighten existence.
Did you notice all the gardeners
at work tn Miecow? That's something new this year. We are getting
a beginning ot leisure. We are
gol g to make Moscow as pleasant
and u beautiful u Paris or Viena.
We never had a chance before. . ."
"Were there no flowers and parks
ln Moscow in the old days then?"
I, asked.
"Certainly," he replied, "but not
for the people!"
I bough^-somc flowers myself be
fore going Into thc theatre. I took
violets, but a priest next to mc purchued a large bouquet of roses. He
stood sniffing at them with evident
delight, nodding at them with evident delight, nodding his head u
if he wanted to say. "Well, well,
that's how roses smell, is lt?" A UtUe girl walked up to him and uked for a flower. He gave her several
and laughed happily.
Are these people Just children, I
thought by myself, that they behave this way u a baby with a
new toy?
NO BREAD LINES
My first day in Moscow I naturally looked for the famous line-ups
of which you hear so much. I mw
none in front of the bakeries and
food shops, but I saw several queues
around five in the afternoon In
front of the news-stands when the
evening papers were being delivered. This certainly is the land of
the newspaper and of the book.
They can't print books fast enough
to keep up with the thirst tor
knowledge. Every two or three
months a new paper-mill goes into
operation, and still there is a shortage of paper. The third volume of
Tolstoys private diary was published during the days when I was
in Moscow—three milUon copies-
all sold within 24 hours. Ana that
wasn't the only new book published
Alexis Tolstoy, who is no relative
of the great sage ot Yasnaya Polly-
anna, who is also a renowned man
of letters, although no longer a
count, showed me 19 new books
published from July 1 to Sept 1.
Seven were translations from the
French and English writers. All
sold out in a few daya. "There is
no coping with the demand for
books,   said Tolstoy.
"Three million members of the
youth league have voluntarily given
up smoking cigarettes in order to
make more paper available for
printing and still there is no immediate hope ,0 supply the demand,"
he said.
SECOND LARGEST LIBRARY
And not only new books are
bought. Every nook and corner of
Russia is ransacked for old books,
the old chateau librari ■ the old
museums, the garrets, the cellars of
old houses, everything in printed
form is seized upon as a treasure.
"But some of the old books must
be considered dangerous," I uid
"Can people be trusted with what
you would call reactionary literature'' I asked. "Does the government permit it?"
Alexis Tolstoy laughed heartily at
my quesUon. "We don't burn books",
he said. "We are not afraid at all
to have the young people compare
life as it was in days gone by with
the new lite they are living themselves." And so I learned that thc
,'oscow public library became last
year the second largest in the world,
topped only by the Brit' li Museum,
and that 480 branch libraries have
been opened in the city, and that an
average of 900,000 booki are loaned
out per week in Moscow alone, and
that 13,000 travelling libraries are
circulating in the country at present.
If they really are children, I
thought, they'll soon grow up at that
ratei
Rev. Mr. Silverwood
Who Has Been III, Is
on Road to Recovery
Rev. W. J. Silverwood, who hu
been confined to hit bed tor the
put tew days, is on the road to recovery, but it will be several days
before he ii able to resume hla
clerical duties.
A Birkenhead widow, aged 70,
who Uved alone, nearly starved to
death when her spring mattress collapsed, leaving Iter trussed up in
such a position that she could not
eicipe.
.;   ftoltenife LW (Eamprtitn. :-
SALE
ON SALE TODAY
MORE WOMEN'S BATHROBES
Figured bathrobes of heavy beacon cloth, roomily cut. Finished with £4^ mtm
long roll collar, pockets and silk cord. Many patterns. Sizes 34 to 44 ▼_^*'-*
HARVEST SALE      ~
Women's
Wool and
Rayon
Panties
and Vests
Just the weight for now
these fine undies of wool
and rayon mixture. Vests
have the shaped top and
panties are finished with
elastic band at the waist
and fitted knee cuff.
Small, medium and large.
HARVEST SALE—
49'
Patterned Velvet
BERETS AND SCARF SETS
Harvest Sale $2*95
Absolutely the last word in headwear and they are
unusually smart at this low price. Come in and see
' them on yourself. Wide color range.
SALE OF WOMEN'S
$3.95, $5.00, $6.00 SHOES
Harvest Sale $3,15 Pair
The finest selection of women's black and brown kid
and calf oxfords, pumps, ties and straps to be sold at
a special price.
CELANESE HOSIERY
Splendid wearing, dull  finished  celanese
hose,   showing   new   shades.   Sizes   8',■'_.
to 10.
HARVEST SALE, PAIR	
29'
WOMEN'S SUEDE
FABRIC GLOVES
Regular lo 79c
Beautiful glove for Fall
wear, smart and right in
fashion, slip on style,
good shades, sizes 6 to
Vh. HARVEST C*)C
SALE, PAIR   *****
WABASSO
BLEACHED
SHEETS
Size 72x90 pure white
cotton sheets.
HARVEST SALE,     QA^
EACH    •*"
LADIES' HANDBAGS
Regular Price $2.95
Fine leathers, beautifully lined and fitted.  Envelope
and pouch style. Smart bone and metal
trimmings. Colors, green, navy, brown
and black.
HARVEST SALE, EACH 	
$1-95
WOOLCOTT BLANKETS
Beautiful blankets in striking paste
plaids or plain shades,  sateen bound, A
good size. These are 25% pure woo!. ™
HARVEST SALE, PAIR	
3.95
SPECIAL SALE OF ENGLISH TOWELS
Striped towels of good quality and size—
20x40, in assorted colors. A real bargain!
item for—
HARVEST SALE, EACH	
25'
Harvest Sale FOOD
SPECIALS
193—PHONES-194
FREE DELIVERY
HBC Luxurloui Coffee At*
Freih ground; per lb. *m~
Cranberry Bauoe— M«J
Empress; 12-oz. bottle m-*~
Oranga Marmalade— 20<_
Empreis; 16-ot globe   mw"r
4 eakes LUX TOILET SOAP
and 1 ragular ilze pkg.
RIN804^^^K 25£
Tha 5 tor
Dill  Picklei
quarts; Jar
-Argood,
m
Bordin'i   Chocolate   Ma fted
Milk—1«;
per tin 	
Rlnso—
Urge pkg. 	
Lifebuoy Soap—
3 cakes 	
C. k\ B. Ketchup—
14-01. bottle
Cut Mixed '■eel-
Robinson's; 1-lb. carton
390
am
*H
w
"FORT   GARRY"   TEA   AND
COFFEE   MAKING   FRIEND8
EVERYWHERE!
Men's Sweater'
Coats
Men's wool mixture
sweater coats in heather
shades. Ideal for house
EACH    $1.4"
Men's    •
Windbreakers
Men's  heavy  doeskin
windbreakers with^ neat
buckle fasteners
at waist. EACH .
Mitts
Boys' Capeskin
mitts.
$1.95
*r
 r
—
PAOI POUR
TRAIL SKIERS
READY TO GO
Working on Hillsite;
to Clear Trails of
Undergrowth
TIIAIL, I. C. Oct. 36—Membtn of
£1 mil-Remind tkl club already
ve itarted to mike prepirttlons
(or winter actlvltlei. Bert Bothun
and BOb Lynburne, together with
mtmbtrs of tba Junior club ban
bttn getting a tmiller btll Into
•bipt tt the "Nala Nelsen* hillsite.
■owtrar. tba elub'a ikl trills hive
fcun aomtwhat neglected and a gang
Ely be out aoon doing a Uttle slssh-
g.
Tbt dub bu t iplendld cabin at
ttt Nairn blllalte, but tha Rouland
gUMIlllr location hu bten licking
a abtltar. An old lot cibln to that
tlctolty will bt renovated and made
lit for occupation thli winter. If
the teuton It successful, la is anticipated, t clubhouse will be erected
next year at a convenient location
•omiwhert neir tht reservoir.
Tbt Kill Nelsen hill trip provide!
aa excellent thort tvenlng run but
oould not be uud lut yetr owing
to th* Uck of mow.
Thl moit popular run of thi club's
tl thl one dowa from Rossland to
thi golf oouru ubln ind from there
to Trill. In the daytime thi "Long
Trail", a dlitance of about thru
miles, li uied ind sometlmei the
"Short TnU" which cuti off about
a mUa aad one hilf, makes i fut
run to the cibln, wltb plenty of
thrills.
A new route U being plsnned
to the reservoir cibln, ind wlll
provldi sn excellent run for night
•Icllng, u well u t central but
for Bunday outlngi. Thli new rout!
will be tble to be put ln uie earlier In the lesion thtn the othen,
prolonging tht cabin season con-
llderibly.
Officen thit will be ln chirge for
the 1934-36 sesson ire: Jamei Calder.
president; W. H. Hmmy, flnt vice-
president; H. T. Ommanney. second
vice-president; N. o. Randall, treasurer; Miry Anderson, treuunr; Bert
Bothun ski captain; Mlas Nora Smith
and Mlu AUce Houston, cibln committee. '
Then wlll bt five or ilx assistant ill csptilns to bi appointed by
Bert Bothun. Theu appointees wlll
bin chirge of group ikl parties over
the week-ends. I MB
WHAT TO DO
ABOUT
cid Indigestion"
people who Minis' they have
1 atomachs" or "indigestion,"
i say, suffer in realtti/ from
I more serious than aad stom-
I this common ailment can
Usually be relieved now, in minutes.
All you do is take familiar Phillips'
MUk of Magnesia after metis. This
•cts to almost immediately neutralise
the itomach acidity that brings on
your trouble. You feel like a new
penoni
Try this just once. Take either the
familiar liquid "PHILLIPS'", or the
new Phillips' Milk of Magnesia
Tablets. But watch out that you get
the Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of
Magnesia. Made in Canada.
ALSO IS TABLET FORM*
Phillips' Milk of Msgnesia Tib-
lets sre now on ssle st sll drug
•tores  everywhere.   Esch  tiny
tablet  is tht
tquivslent of
■ trsspoonlul
of Genuine
Phillips* Milk
ot Magnesia.
Phillips
Canon Gould Goes
East by Main Line
Canon oould, of tht Anglicin foreign missions, who wu to iddreu i
luncheon In NtUon Frldiy. chinged
hli itlnenry when ht leirned then
was i bin on NeUon githerlngs,
ind he went eut on the mala line
Prldiy night Initeid of coming
through by wiy of thi Kettle Villey.
GERRY LAUDER
LEAVING TRAIL
Resigns From Sports
Association; Did
Good Work
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. J6—The munition of O. A. "Gerry" Lauder
from the president's office of tht
Trail Amateur Athletic auoclttion
waa accepted with regret it tn extensive meeting of thit body In
the Memorlil hill Friday nltht.
"Re will bt mined • great dell,"
tald W. O. "Windy" Wllllimi, vice-
pretdlent, who occupied the chair.
"Hi wu in energetic president ind
I im sure, i mon popultr one."
Secretiry J. Curtu wu Initructed
to lend Mr. Lender i letter of
appreciation for hli put lervlces.
Mr. Lauder hu been transferred
from Tidinac to offices of the C. M.
tt S. compiny it Klmberley.
A flaiaciil report by Treuunr
J. R. McLenin dlacloied the tnuury
of the T. A. A. A. to be In a
healthy atate.
Authorization to purchau iweiten
for the junior hockey tetm wu
tlven. ThU winter the Junlon wlll
shed thit ntme ind be known u
the Tlgen, ind wUI weir t tlgir-
lieid crest on their iweiten.
TRAIL CHAPTER
HAS BIG DANCE
Decorations Elaborate for the
Hallowe'en, Event
TRAIL, B.C.. Oct. 26.—A huge
crowd of people enjoyed the first
outstanding venture of the J. H.
Schofield chapter, 1.0. D. E. toward
welfare assistance, when they attended the Hallowe'en dance In the
Elks hall Friday night.
An elaborate display of decorations presented t true Hallowe'en
spirit. Hoot owls, bltck cats and
witchei were liberally placed about
the walls ln symmetric design and
streamers spanned the chandeliers.
Evidence of painstaking preparations by the new chapter which wu
organised but a few months tgo predominated in the lavishly decorated
hall.
Miu Mary Bishop was convener.
Miss Agnes Rossman and Miu Dorothy DockeriU were chairmen of
the decorations and refreshments
committees.
Trail Discusses
Vancouver Entry
Will Refer Matter to West
Kootenay Hockey
Officials
TRAIL, B. C, Oct. J6—Possibility of the organlutlons of a
B. C. amateur hockey league Including a team or teams from
Vincouver wu disclosed at the
meeting ot the hockey elub executive lut night.
Following Is the test of t win
received from Oeorte Irvine, of
Vancouver: "I am representing the
rubs senior hockey club. No tenlor letgue here thli winter.
Thought It possible jou would
like to have ui play i gime or
two In your territory. Think It
might he great opportunity to put
imtteur hockey over In B. C. If
we cin get a league with you."
While no action was taken on
the matter, It km felt that the
suggestion was worth examining
further. Mr. Irvine wu referred to
the Kootenay Hockey league executive for further particulars, hs
thev would hire to be consulted
eventuilly.
Faster Way Found
to Relieve Headaches
NOW PAIN OFTEN RELIEVED IN MINUTES I   '
Remember the pictures below when
you want fast relief from pain.
Demind and get the method doctors prescribe—Aspirin.
Millions bave found that Aspirin
eases even t bad headache, neuritis
or rheumatic pain often in a tew
ttinutesl
In tbe stomach as in the glass
here, an Aspirin tablet starts to dissolve, or disintegrate, almost tht
instant it touches moisture. It begins "taking hold" of your pain
practically is soon as you swallow it.
Equally important, Aipirin is
safe. For scientific tests show this:
Aspirin does not harm the heart.
Remember these two points:
Aipirin Speed ind Aipirin Safety.
And, see thtt you tet ASPIRIN. It
is made in Canada, and all druggists
have it. Look for Uie name Bayer
in the form of a cross on every
Ainirin tablet.
Get tin of 12 tablets or economical
bottle of 24 or 100 it my druggist's.
Why Aspirin Worki So Fair
Drop in Aspirin
tablet kn t gloss of
wtter. Note that BEFORE it tmichn ttn
bottom, it k disintegrating.
IN 1 SKONDI BY STOP WATCH
An Aspirin tablet starts to disintegrate tnd go lo work.
Whtt happens In these lime*
hamm in your itomach—AS PIRIN
tablets start "taking hold' of pain
t few minutes ifter taking.
WOMAN SENT
HIM THREAT
"You're Going to Pay
Darling" She Wrote
to Wealthy Man
LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2U (AP).-A
women giving the nunc of Miss
Msry Murray wis trrested here todty by Postal Inspector C. D. Lowe
and Police Detective Chester Lloyd,
who said ihe admitted writing ■
threatening letter to Jamei Gordon
Ross, wealthy Montreil mtn.
Miss Murray claims, the officers
said, thtt she is t sister to Ross' deceased wife, who wtt divorced
from him several yeirs tgo.
Tht letter, the officer! itld, commented on "how you millonilrei do
carry on," and slid, "I'll tell you in
my next letter whtt I'll .t if I don't
get i satisfactory reply to this
letter."
"You're going to piy. darling. I'll
forget I ever heard of the Rosiei it
you do your ihare and don't forget
you art 1 gentlemen.''
Ross issertedly turned the letter
over to authorities in Montreal. The
letter was mailed from Los Angeles
October 3 and tddressed to Ross it
Old Orchard avenue, Montreil.
SAFEWAYS WIN
TRAIL BOWLING
Hornett and Weir of the
Times Are High Men
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. ae.—.Safe-way
Storu defeated Trill Tlmei two out
of three jamea of the Trill Ten*
pin Bowling leigue played at thi
Memorial hill Prldiy night. L. Hor*
nett of the Times bowled high
tingle of ITS and W. Weir of the
ume team made high aggregate
of 471.
Teams ind (Korers were:
Safewayi: lit   Und   3rd   Tot.
O.   Economy   ....   84    134    ISO- 368
J. Dty   148   137   184- 434
A. Romano   lit   108   131— 344
8. Orthtm   ISS   133   151— 41S
J.   Mallec     133    1S3    148— 403
Spot    _    73     78     78— 318
Totlll
SS4   888   783—3174
Trtll Tlmu:        lit 3nd 3rd   Tot.
W.   Weir    : 188 148 J87— 471
L. Hornitt   178 104 138— 418
J.  Thorndale   .... 137 144 134— 385
D. Balfour  141 141 141— 438
M. Cummlngs ... 158 115 134— 387
Totlll      770 848 883—3101
COMPLETE HOLES
ON POWER LINE
Rapid progress is now being made
on the new city power line between
the Bonnington power plant and the
substation on Victoria street. Pole
holes have been completed to tbe
substation, the lttt few holes on
Josephine street having been dug
lite Fridiy afternoon. Pole raising
md wire stringing is ilso in full
swing tnd is well idvinced.
Names Players for
Trail Hoop Team
TRAIL. B.C., Oct. M.—Tratl'i rep
basketba I.ers will start on their long
mtrch which they hope will letd
them to the B.C. pltyoffs Mondty
night when they hold their first
workout
It his been impossible to obtain
the names of those chosen to try
out for the teim from ill four senior
aggregations, but lists have been obtained from Elks and Buffalos.
Following are the lucky onei from
these teams:
Elks—L. Nicholson, L. Williams,
D. Hartley, W. O. Williams, D.
Askey, P. Halliwell, A. Morris and
Ed. Haley.
Buffs—J. Curtis, Ken Chandler,
W. Westwood, J. Burrows, A. Grip-
ich and C. Bradbury.
Coach Nicholson, of tht Elks, did
not feel Justified in letving tny of
his teem off the list, md Phil Williams, Buffllo cotch, only omitted
two ntmes.
A cotch ind manager for the
tetm will probibly bt chosen by
the reps it their first workout, but
Just who they will be is extremely
doubtful. Phil William! tnd Laurie
Nicholson seem to be the popultr
Choice of the ftns, but the players
themselves may have different ideal.
THt NILSON DAILY NIW*. NILSON. i.C-SATUADAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1JJ4-
PAVING ABOUT
COMPLETE END
VERNON STREET
Only a small section remtini to
complete the paving on Railway
itreet between Vernon md Baker
streets. Fridiy t big gang ot city
workers advanced the paving from
Vemon street along Railway, to
within a few yardi of the concrete
on Biker.
HOOP LEAGUE
PROGRESSES
Two of Three Games
for Saturday Look
Promising
LKAQl'E STANDING
Senior men'i division:
P W L
Colombo!    „    3 8 0
Butfiloi     4 8 1
Adintci     8 13
Bib       4 0 4
Intermediate Men'i dlvltlon;
Acm         4 4 0
Comiti    4 3 3
Hlth  School    8 1 3
Ladlei' dlvltlon:
Orlom    4 4 0
Jimmlet       .    8 3 1
Schooli <    3 1 1
Cinucki    4 0 4
TRAIL. B. C, Oct. 38—Of the
three buketbill gimei of thl Trill
city leigue scheduled for Siturday
night, thoee of the men'i lenlor
ind Intermediate divisions, no doubt,
will prove the moit spectacular, the
third game, between the Jimmies
and Schooli, having a definite anticipated   result.
The flrtt time of the nlght'i prognm will be tht Intermeditte battle
between thi Rovera ind High ichool,
Roven hive lott three gtmu out of
thret played and tht High ichool
hu won Hi only gime of three
from thi Roven: but by only t until
mirtln. with the tld of ume new
recrulti Roven hope to iurpaat thl
literal meaning of their nimi md
direct their play to win.
The aenlor Jpen's game, Colombos vs. Adanacs will reveal the same
teimi that battled a wwk tgo Saturday night, -which gamt ruulted
ln a win tor Colombo! who hive
won their three tames ot the leigue
playad. Adama, however, have ilnce
then had the experience of a win
over the Elki on wedneidiy night
and thlt victory may have tlven
them tn Incentive to itrlve tor t
like remit Saturday.
VOTERS' LISTS
ARE PLACED OP
NELSON SENIOR
RUGBY IS OFF
Too Late for the Boys
to "Start Training
Now
Nelion, it hti been definitely
ittted here, will hive no lenior
rugby teim thli year. According to
t itory in the Trill Timet Fridiy,
lt wtl ittted thet the Trill seniors
would be willing to pliy Nelson at
Trtll Sundty if the like city could
get t iquid together.
Nelion wti preptred to go over
list Sundiy but wu informed thit
owing to heelth reitriction in Nelaon Tt wit deemed advisable for
them to remtln tt home. Although
it wu to be t tenlor teem, in retlity
it wu to be composed mainly of
junlon. With the Junlon pitying
here Sundty it would be impossible*
for tht lenlon to field t tetm. The
idei of • teim hu fallen through
completely here within the list
week. It is too lite to start training
now ind u no practice! hive been
htld tht boyi feel they could not
provide the competition thtt Trail
would have a right to expect
SENIORHOCKEY
LOOP AT TRAIL?
Pre-Season League
Is Pracitcally
Assured
40!  Names Listed at Kaslo
Expect Figures From Each
Point by Monday
CLEAN LEAVES
OFF SIDEWALKS
City employees an now bruihint
up the upper itreeta, and luvw
which cover aldewilki ln mmy mc-
tlona an being gathered before mow
tilli. At preient Silica etnet slde-
wilki are being cleaned off.
Former Smelter
Head Is at Trail
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26-H. H. Stewtrt, former general mimger ot tbe
Consolidated was visiting ln Trill
md Tadanac yeiterday, Mr. Stewtrt
It now t consulting mining engineer
in Vincouver, hiving been succeeded is general mantger of the CM.
& S. compmy by S. G. Blaylock.
Metallurgy   Secretary
Visits in Trail
TRAIL, B.C. Oct. »-.. R. Smith,
secretary of the Rocky mountain
section of the Ctntdltn Inatitute ot
Mining md Metallurgy, ii in Trail
todiy.
When in Pain Remember Thete Pictures
ASPjmiN IS THt TRADE MARK OF THI BAYER COMPANY, LIMITED
.ENDS
a Cold
Sooner
MOVED BY 2 GEMMATIONS
Voters' lliti htve been pltced up
in Nelion md Trail for scrutiny by
people concerned, md they will remtln there until the dites ot re
vision, November 13, 14, 19. Lilts
tre posted outside each point of revision throughout the entire riding,
Word received from Kulo statei
thlt 401 ntmes have been placed on
the Ulti there. H. D. Ramsden. registrar of voten for Kooteniy West,
expects to hive figures on the num
ber of voter! at each point by Mon
■sty-
Wadsworth Coming
Out for Alderman
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. »-Although
two full month! still remtln before
civic elections tike plice, the city
political pot is alretdy beginning to
boll. Ctuse of the first ebullition is
the rumor thtt J. A. Wedsworth
his definitely decided to enter the
aidermanic race.
Three seats on the city council
•nd the miyor'i office ire to be
filled it the civic election in January. Alderman C. A. Newmm.
John (Ice) Young md F. J. Writt
tre the three retiring councillors.
Scout Commissioner
to Visit Nelson
A visit from W. Sollwiy, executive commiuioner for scouting in
British Columbit, is expected by
the local scout organization in the
netr future. Mr. Sollway visited
Trail recently but did not come to
Nelion owing to the bin thtt his
been -placed on the city.
TRAIL. B.C., Oct. 2J.-rormttion
of i three-teem pre-ieuon hockey
leigue li virtually assured Trail's
followers ot the puck-chasing game
wtth the appointment of i committee of three by the Trail Hockey
club executive laat night, to go into
the proposition md report back to
the executive. P. F. Mclntyre, Coach
Frank Wtlte md Percy Hellett ire
the members of the committee.
Opening date of the proposed pre
seison league ctnnot be stated det*
initely yet, but it is hoped the rink
will be open by the middle of next
month in order that the playera will
get a chance to get the feel of skates
.ni show the stuff they are mide of
before the Kootenay letgue gets
under way around Christmas.
The Hockey club's annual earn!
val. also ctme up tor discussion ltst
night, but no dtte could be set until
definite innouncement of the open*
ing dtte of tht rink had been ob*
tuned md irrmgements with other
organizations using the rink had
been completed.
The foUowlng committees were
appointed for the ctmivil:
Entertainment—J. A. MicKlnnon,
chilrmm; Frank Walte, C, W.
(Curly) Wheatley, and P. B. Hallett.
Tickets, advertising and doors—
J. A. Wad-worth, chtlrmtn; W. J,
Wagstaff tnd A. W. (Gus) Mc
Domld.
Booths tnd hot dog itand *—
Charlei Rommerdahl, chairman;
Sam Stewart, "Rusty" O'Sulllvan,
md Pat Norrle. The Booster club
will work in conjunction with this
committee.
Mile rice—C. Kendall md Elliot
Crowi-.
Plans will be made to make the
carnival bigger md better than ever
this year, ft is hoped to obtain the
opening night of the rink for the
ctrnlval it hit been the case ln previous yeirs, is this gives the skating
md hockey season an extra fillip it
the start.
Hepburn Cuts the
Interest Rate
TORONTO Oct. 39 (CPI—Reduction of one-half per cent ln Interest
on loins mide by the Ontario agricultural board, wai announced to-
day by Premier Mitchell p. Hepmirn
The Intereit in futurt will be only
four per cent.
Set Date for Meeting
of Bank Shareholders
OTTAWA, Oct W-Fint general
meeting of ihtreholderi of the Bmk
of Canada will be held January 23,
when seven directors will be selected, Minister of Finance Rhodes innounced todty. •
LONDON, Oet. se (CP cable)—
Japanese naval negotiators, leaking
recognition of thi principle of equality of thetr toroea with Britain md
the united Statu, bad itlll failed
to lay down a concrete scheme tonltht
Flashes From the Wires
SINGAPORE (Saturdiy) (AP)
It wai reported here thit King
Prtjadhipok of Slam hai abdicated
hii throne tt Bangkok.
SEWARD, Aliski-The body of
Mrs. Ed Andenon and one ot her
two small children, ill of whom
drowned when • smsll fishing bost
cipsized when hit by a breaker in
Homer slough, were recovered.
STEVEN8
TORONTO (Stturdiy)—An Ottawi dupttch fo tht Mill ind
Empire uld todty thlt mother
meeting of ctblnet council hn
bun called for today at 10 a.m.
"Tht expectation ll," the dmpttch
itld, "thtt before tht diy ll ever
ill tht formtlltlti Incidental to
tny ehtnft in the mlnlitry wlll
htvt bttn fulfilled."
VICTORIA-Hen. A. W. Gray.
minister of ltnds snd municipal affairs will take up residence in Vic-
tortt.
BERKLEY—Thtt mm cm be restored to life md norms! mentality
•fter clinically deid u long tfter
ti 30 mlnutei it claim of Dr. Robert
E. Comlth.
SEATTLE—Three weeks igo John
Dull, t I7-yeir-oId Eskimo lad from
Bethel in northern Alukt, had
never talked over a telephone or
seen a motion picture or ridden in
an elevator. Today he made a tolo
flight ln an airplane after only one
hour and 26 minutes in the tir.
STEVENS
TORONTO (Sturdiy (CP)-Tht
Mill ind Empire todiy publlihid
the following deipttch from Iti
Ottawi corretpondent:
"The rtport thlt Hon. H. H.
Steveni, once he hu formilly re-
ilgned it mlniiter of trade tnd
commerce, Intend! to icek hli political futun with tht C.C.F.,
ciuied wide lnterut when It wu
circulated in political circlet In
thi capital tonight (Prlday night),
EVERETT, Wash.—Motorists md
nearby gas station owners htd t
"gasoline feast" when a Pacific
transport truck waa ditched and
sprang a leak. Tin pans. JO gallon
barrels and jugs were used, as some
.1900 gallons of gaaollne trickled
from the traniport.
BOSTON—Id Don George, 220,
Java, N.J., defended hit wrutllng
title claims by defeating Jim Browning. 239, Verona, Mc, ln a two-out-
of-three falls match.
TORONTO—Contention that former Premier Oeorge S. Henry md
Senator Arthur Meighen, rulgned
member of the Ontario hydro elec-
trl power commission, beciute of
penonil lnterut should hive remained outside negotiations by the
government end the commission for
purchue of Ontario Power Service
corporation assets is contained in
findings of a royil commission thit
examined the purchases lut summer. *,
ENTOMBED FftOG
LOUD IN CROAKS
FOR FLOOD TIME
HOOUIAM, Wuh., Oct. 36 (OP)—
Rains and floods have not discouraged Hoqulim'i fimom entombed
city hill frog—in fact, lt la In more
and better voloe than ever, uyi City
Clerk Ola Hall.
It'i   singing   ln   the   riln   ind
flood." uyi Mlu Hill.
"It'i luppoeed to bi up ln thi
will, twty from the flood, but maybe It hu ume wiy to get down ind
enjoy the witer. Anywiy, tn never
hurd him crou my louder."
EDDIE SHORE
GETS $7009
Dons Uniform of the
Bruins; Four New
Players Sign Up
QUEBEC, Oct. 26 (CP)-Eddie
Shore, Alberta farmer md star Nitlonil Hockey letgue defencemin,
todiy arrived at the Boston Bruins
training camp here, signed his contract for the limit allowed by the
league, 97000, and turned out for
two practices. His appearance completed the club's roster.
"Red" Doran, burly defenctman
of New York Americans, came to
the Bruins on lorn and also got into
practice.
Business Manager Art Ross stated
that four amateurs had agreed to
terms md would sign Bruin contracts during the week-end. They
are P. Hergescheimer, Winnipeg;
Toe Blike, Hlddlng, Minn.; P. Bess-
ler md A. Motter of Melville, Sask.
It-was expected these playen would
break in with Bruins Cubs of the
Canadian American league.
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAIL, B. C., OO** ja-MTI. _. Mlt-
thews, RlverslBi, who hu been visiting ln Spokane, hu returned home.
Ill
Mr. lnd Mn. Edward M. Stllu,
Tidinac, have returned home from
a trip to Calgiry.
i   •   i
Mr. md Mn. A. J. McDoneil,
Oovernment roid, hive nturned
home from Boswell, whtre they vUlted at the home of Mrs. McDonell's
mother, Mrs, i. Lewis.
I  m   l
Robert Colllnt of Calgary hu tak*
en up residence ln Trail.
.ttt
Mr. tnd Mn. Howard Parker were
reoently guute of relatives at Slo
ctn City.
*_ *   '   '
Mn. I. jonei hai returned to bir
home it Johnson's Landing ifter
viiltlng ln TnU.
.   .   .
Mr. md Mri. WHter Bronn md
(laughter Monica ipent t ihort holiday recently it slocan City when
they were guuta ot Mn. Brown's
mother. They were accompanied
home by their aon Walter who hai
been vlaltlng hit grandmother.
• •   •
Mn. M. L. Barnu, Bay avenue, wa*
hosteia yuterday afternoon to Circle
No. 1 of the Women'i auxiliary to
St. Andrew'! church. A bake ule
Wu held wedneidiy afternoon by
Circle No. 2 at the home of Mn. T
H. Ollla. and Mrs. W. Hudson, Dockerlll strut, entertained Circle No. I
yesterday afternoon.
Circle No. l ot thi women'i it*
loclitlon of Knox United church wu
entertained yesterday afternoon by
Mrs. w. E. Wilson, Bay avenue.
Entertaining Circle No, 2 wu Mn,
Walter Douglu, Government road.
Meeting of Circle No. 3 wu held
*,', ttw home of Mn. WUUam C,
.\c<m. Topping itrwt.
• •   •
Mn. A. Vannucchl wu hoeteu
yeiterday ifternoon it ths tea hour
to memDeri of NeUon avepui circle
of TnU lubdlvlilon, cithollc women'! luue.
.   .   .
Mn. J. Brown entertained Riverside circle.
ill
Centrtl circle met at the homt of
Mn, A- J. McDonci. oovernment.
Entertaining for Trail women'i Institute, Mn. J. T. Newmin, Bay avenue, wu a charming hoitew at one
ot t bridge Krles lut night. Mn
Herbert Clark wu winner of high
scon and Miu Verna atlnson received thl low.
• •   •
Memben of the Women'i mxllliry
to East Trail mission entertained at
a card party and dmce ln the mlaaion hall lut night. Mn. o. Hill
ind W. Cooper ume high score for
flnt prim, Mn. Casey jonei and
Dtvld Stuart winning consolation
awards. Dancing followed refiesh-
ments. Mn. Herbert Jobnston htd
charge of the entertainment. Mrs.
Charlu T. Conry and Mn. J. T.
Wilkinson serving refreshments.
9      .      *
Mr. snd Mn. F. w. Stevemon havi
returned from vlaltlng friendi it
Klnmlrd.
• t   •
A niceenful cud pirty wu held
lut evening In the Catholic parUh
hall, memben ot tbe Trail tubdlv-
lilon, Cithollc Women'a league as*
tertalning. Rev. Pather J. C. McKenzie of Nelson was master, of
ceremonies. Mn. Reginald Varcoe
was winner of ladlu' Ilrst prize, and
Mr. varcoe made high scon for
gentlemen, conaolatlona were awarded to MIm Bernice Enterbrook and
Clark. At Five Hundred. Mn.
Oeorgt Bergeron waa winner ol high
aeon award. Hallowe'en decoration!
were uied throughout the hill. Black
■nd onnge garlanda and itreimen
decorated the walU. black cits, am-
uilng wltchu and other novelties
adding attraction to the scheme,
Tilllu wen imm pumpklm ind
icore padi wire covered wtth onnge
pidi with bltck decontlom.. Serv-1
Ing on Ule committees were Mn.
Oeorge Platt, Mn. Archibald Mill.r.
Mrs. Ivan Jeffery. Mn. m. R. Lm-1
duccl, Mn. Wllllim oenrd, Mn.
Ernest Levesque, Mn. Thomu fames i
and Mlu Jeanne Butonc. Mn. Eimei J
hid charge ot tallies.
Rev. J. C. McKenzie of Nelion '
li vuitlng ln Tnll.
• li
Rowland ivenue circle of tbe
Trail subdivision. Catholic Women'!
league, wai entertained last night
by Mn. prtnk Roumtn, Roulind
■venue.
EASTERN CAPITALISTS OPENING
THE FERN MINE IN YMIR CAMP
Old Timer Produced
$300,000 in Its
Operations
The Fern  Mine,  an early  -cold
property of the Ymlr ramp, whwe
10-Mump mill In reported to have
turned out more than 1300,000 In
the heydays, Ih due to hum with
activity   onre   more.   Now   ln   the
hands of the Oold Fern Syndicate,
a group of Buffalo, N.Y-, and Toronto,   Ont.,   Interests   headed   by
Manager    Leonard    L.    Adams   of
Buffalo,   who   lit   now   In   Nelson,
the  Fern  wlll  he reequlpped  and
a  start   made  at  oure  on  a  new
tunnel 1000 feet below the present
workings,   to   cut   the   Fern   and
other parallel veins.
W. M. Myers has been appointed
as the  syndicate's consulting engineer and  a contract haa been  let
to   the  A.   H.   Oreen   company   for
the   construction   of   new   camp
equipment to accommodate 13 men,
bunkhouse, blacksmith shop and  a
compressor houae, A compressor, 216
cubic feet capaqlty, and a complete
drilling equipment, have been order-
td and wlll be Installed by November 15.
Two ahlfts will advance undtt
Mine Foreman Bob Eunson and thc
men wilt be housed in tents until
the new buildings g<r up.
The Oold Fern Syndicate, financed by Canadian brokers, holds s
lense arid option of purchase covering the property, mada by Lloyd H
Hawley ns lessor In favor of Jamea
Fisher as leasee, which lease and
option wu acquired by Leonard L,
Adama, and which have been assigned to the syndicate.
The board of managers Includes
Leonard L. Adams, Buffalo, N.Y.,
manager; H. M. Dignam, Toronto,
Ont,, secretary-treasurer; Norman C.
Weser. Buffalo, N. Y„ and Ivan
Marks. Richmond Hill, Ont.
The Fern property, comprising
some five crown-granted claims Chl-
cora, Etrura Fraction. Eureka, Fern
and Hidden Treasure, was first located by Captain Duncan, who staked the first claim ,in 1807. He later
aold   tt   for  the   reported   sum   of
160,000. The property wu then operated by the Fern Oold Mining an!
Milling company, which company in*
stalled a complete milling plant and
gravity train at a cost of soma
$50,000. A chute of free milling
gold ore was opened up at a depth
of 360 feet on the dip of the veltn
The oompany profitably mined and
milled a considerable tonnage from
this chute. Much of the ore carried
gold values up to $160 per ton and
waa ahlpped directly to the smelter
without local treatment. One car*
load of about 20 tons of shipping
grade of ore wu estimated to havt
a value of $3000. In late years tht
mill and camp were destroyed by
fire.
Records show that the production
of this mine wu 750 tons per month
with a recovery of #14 per ton and
a loaa of $-3 to $7 per ton ln tailings. Some very high grade ore wat
shipped to the smelter which earrt*
ed values from $70 to $1331 per ton
In gold. The total production of tht
mine Is reported to have exceeded
more  than   $309,000.
INTERIM RECEIVER
FOR FLIN FLON MINES
TORONTO. Oct. M (OP)-F. Gordon Cook, registrar In binkruptry at
osgoode hall, today sppolnted F. O,
Tidy ss Interim receiver of tho
property ot Manitoba Flln lion
mines, Limited, Toronto.
BABYS
OWN
SOAP
Way.*.
•EfWyl.
The Tyranny of Nerves
Makes You Unhappy
When th* nervous system becomes undermined,
You become a victim of many fears.
You are afraid to be alone, afraid to be In
crowds.
You are afraid of what is going to happen,
And are consequently always.worrying.
Soon you become irritable and unreasonable
And make life unpleasant to those around you.
Headaches, sleeplessness and digestive troubles
Add to your worries.
The clouds grow darker and the fears multiply
Until such time as you restore vigor to ths
nerves.
As you know this can readily be done
By using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.
As new strength and confidence are restored,
You regain control of yourself
And fears and worries disappear
To be replaced by good health and happiness.
"Sib, Betty! — You're much loo big to cry. Let's get Aunt Alice
to tell ua why t nice little girl feels so weepy ,
end crosi all of a ludden."
This little girl says ihe doem't want to play either, Mother. I'd
give her Castoria tonight. Perhape it'a ceaatlpatlon
that'a making her ao lietleei."
"Oh Aunt AUce! - I'm juat fine today! — Yes, I hsd my Cssteria
laet night — and Mother aaya to tell you that the
thinki it'a simply wonderful!"
F4 "•'*" •« (■><) you're better, Betty dear!   Yoa tell your
**-£/ Mother that Caatorla la made especially for children just
like you. And It hasn't a thing In it that would hurt your little baby
brother either.—Hell love tha
taate of It Jut aa much aa
you do. — And don't forget that
it'a a aplendld thing te lake if
you fee] a little iniffly cold
coming on."
CASTORIA
The children's laxatlrs
from babyhood to 11-cm
 __________
\act>
-THI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. I.C-IATURDAY MORNING. OCT. V. 1IJ4-
i boqueit of itock, worth at the
it £100,000. to a Wiltihire cotute
ipltal had Increued in value to
irly £1*1,000 at tha tlmt ot tht
•tor's deith.
ia M. Mitchell, a Negro, recently
tbrated her 87th consecutive ytar
a teacher In the public Khooli
Raleigh, N.C.
Let Smart
Footwear
Add the Finishing Touch
Good	
Housekeeping
By MBS. MARY MORTON
Menui, RMlptl and Hints
That charming evening
dress can only look its
best when chic evening
footwear from  Andrews
it worn—
OUR SELECTION  IS
LARGE
Our styles are ultra modern in every detail.
I. ANDREW
& COMPANY
Leaden in Footfathion
Mimi Hint
Cream of Spinach Soup     Cracktra
Potato Souffle     Stewed Tomatoei
Coleilaw   .
Petri Baked With Honey
Milk Tea or Coffee
This ii a menu made up largely
of dishes suitable for children. II
a good one tor people with delicate
digestions, and may also be wrved
to the youngsters.
Today'l Reelpti
Cream of Spinach Soup — One
tablespoon butter, one onion, chopped; one cup cooked iplnach, one
cup water ln which iplnach cooked,
two tablespoons butter, one iable-
ipoon flour, two cups milk. Melt
butter, add onion and saute a ttw
mlnutei. Add ipinach, wattr and
lastly white sauce made by blending
butter, flour and milk. Heat through,
season well and serve piping hot.
Potato Souffle— One cup hot
mashed potatoes, one teaspoon butter, two tablespoons hot milk, ont
egg, one-fourth teaspoon salt. Whip
potatoes, add butter and milk and
eggs. Beat until light. Turn Into a
greased baking dish, making the
potato stand up ln peaks. Have
ready one slice broiled bacon cut ln
squares. Fit these squares into the
top and bake altogether until the
bacon Is crisp and tht potato Irown-
Peirs Baked With Honey- Peel
pears, halve and core. Arrange In k
greased baking dish, put a spoon of
honey in wen, and jutt a bit ot
butter. Add a small amount 'of water or orange juice to the bottom of
the pan and bake until peari are
tender. Serve hot or cold, plain, with
top milk, cream, of a soft custard
sauce.
PACTS AND PANCIIS
Economy
"When making waffles, pancake!
or noodles, I never use my egg
whites," iay« a houiewlfe. "1 put
them in a glau meaturing cup and
keep ln the refrigerator for a week
or more and when I get a cupful we
have angelfood cake. My family
la very fond of lt tnd ln thii way it
ii not expenilve."
Qulnci PrMtrvii
Wuh and part quinces, cut In
quarter! and remove corn. Cook
skins ln wtter to cover until toft.
Strain off thli wtter and in It cook
the qulncei and half as many ap
pies, pared and cored. Cook untl!
ruit Is tender. Drain from water,
measure and add tq tho liquid in
the pan three eupa tugtr for each
four cupi trult. Boil lyrup ten mlnutn. Add fruit and cook slowly
until fruit is a delicttt pink. Turn
Into hot, ittril? Jan, cover with
boiling syrup and seal at once.
§/UEW/Uf§YORF§
MORE PEOPLE THAN
EVER BEFORE!
ire buying ALL their food supplies at their SAFEWAY ttttt becauie they have
found from experience that SAFEWAY'S
SATURDAY    conslttently low pricei enable thsm to     MONDAY
make regular monthly tavlngi In their
PHONE 153^ household budget! 'ME DELIVERY
COFFEE
NABOB GLASS JAR
Limit S Lbi.
Per Lb 421
BUTTER
HIGHWAY lit GRADI
Limit I Lbi.
3 Lbs. 69*
TEA
BLUI RIBBON
Per Lb.
45*
FREE with $2 purchase—3 bars Pearl Laundry Soap
BIRD SEED, Spratfi pkg. 18c
PEAS, Orchard City, sieve 3 2 tint 25*
PUMPKIN, Llbby'i 2V_i tin 13c
SALT, Windior (limit 2)  24 os. pkg.   5*
OXO 10» (limit 2)  tin 21c
CORN FLAKES »?'    1 Pkgi. lft,
POTTED MEATS, Libby's 4 tint 25c
PORK AND BEANS. Libby's li, tails .... 3 tins 23*?
PINEAPPLE, Singapore 2 tint 19c
CORN, Aylmer 2i,  Bantam       2 tlm 25*
SOAP, Corbolic 6 cokes 25c
SODAS aft?ol"r"* Box29*
CUT GREEN BEANS, Libby's 2 tins 23c
LARD, Swift's     3 Ib. tin 47*
4 LUX SOAP (1 Rinso Free) 4 bars23c
CRISCO   3-lb. tin 67*
QUAKER OATS, Plain pkg. 18c
TOILET PAPER ,„.-      8 Rolls 25*
HALLOWE'EN SPECIALS
FRESH BUTTERED POPCORN
FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS
FRUITS
APPLES
COOKING
8 Lbi. IH
GRAPES
IMPIRORI
Per Lb.        151
APPLES
MelNTOSH
6 Lbi. 251
Vogotablos
LETTUCE
OKANAGAN
a Headi      15<
CELERY
ARMSTRONG
Per Lb. 19*\
SPINACH
FRISH  LOCAL
3 Lbi. 191
PUMPKIN
FRISH-NICI 8IZI
Per Lb.   4*
TOMATOES
HOT HOUSE
Per Lb. 2**
FREE
DELIVERY
QUALITY NEAT VALUES
PHONE
153
POT ROASTS
NO WASTE
** .- H - io*
ROUND STEAK
2 Lbt. 291
VEAL STEAKS
MEATY
2 Lbi. 220
SPARE RIBS
FRESH
2 Lbi. 230
BOILING BEEF *  4 lb*. 25*
PORK OVEN ROASTS   Ib. 18*
BONELESS VEAL OVEN ROASTS    Ib. 18*
BEEF, Rump Roait    Ib. 15*
LAMB SHOULDERS, Choice Ib. 12*
LAMB LECS, No. I Quality  Ib. 23*
FRESH HAMBURGER   2 lbi. 19*
BREAKFAST SAUSAGE      lb. 10*
BONELESS BEEF STEW AND KIDNEY      2 lbi. 19*
LAMB STEW, Rib   2 Ibs. 19*
PURE PORK LITTLE PIG SAUSAGE   ....   Ib. 20*
VEAL CHOPS, Tender 2 lbt. 29*
IPORK TENDERLOIN, Freih Ib. 28*
BABY BEEF LIVER, Sliced   2 lbs. 23?
SWIFT'S BREAKFAST BACON, Sliced Ib. 39*
SUGAR CURED CORN BEIF   Ib. IB*
SMOKED PICNICS, Mild  Ib. 20*
WS    ftCtfHVI    THS    RISHT    TO    LIMIT   CUANTITISS
DISTRIBUTION fcSl WITHOUT WASTE
Symphony Concert
Pleases Cranbrook
CBANBROOK, B.C.. Oct M.-One
of the moit lucceuful of the concert! staged by the Cranbrook Sym-
Xhony oreheetra wu thtt In the
■udltorlum Wedneedty evening
when t good eudlence. In point of
numben end enthutium, meted
the playen under their leader William Haven.
Th* program preaented waa well
choien and varied and the ttiiit-
tng talent wu given a splendid
hearing u will u the cltiical number! rendered by th* muilciani. Of
•pedal lnterut wu the teat piece
which the orcheitra hu choien to
play at the Blalrmore ftttlvtl Sat*
urd*y, "The Magic Flute." Thli wu
played with the feeling and flnlih
uiually evoked from till muilciahi
by Mr. Raven.
Othar old favorites, played at
other festival! and concert! wero
welcomed by the audience, "Pomp
and Circumstance" alwayi receiving
an enthusiastic ovation when played by th* group. Th* "Death of
Aie" from the Pere Oynt wu a new
number beautifully don*.
Two solos by Mr. Ian Douglu of
Klmberley received a moit enthui-
laitlc reception. Hli numben ware
particularly mlted to hli voice tnd
were heirtlly encored.
The double quartet numben wert
alio really enjoyed, the blend of
volcu being harmonloui tnd tht
long! chosen ptrticularly plculng.
They sing "0 Mom of Bouty" and
the "Qypiy Chorui'1 from Bohemian
Olrl. The ilngen were Mn. Raven,
Mlu Jean Glendenning, Mra, Paxton, Mri. 0. MacDonald, Messrs.
Hinton, Crawford, Evani and Man-
ton.
Mlu Barbara Pink, t youthful
violinist, pupil of Vincent rtnk,
mad* the hit ot the evening with
her rendering of t number idvinced for her yeirs, pitying Monti's
"Cnrdu" with th* duh tnd verve
uiutlly expected of 1 much mort
leuoned pliyer. At ia conclusion
tht received t decided ovation.
C. V. Edwtrdi wai t pitnlst for
the orcheitra numben tnd concert
numben.
Mr. tnd Mn. E. MicKlnnon htvt
returned from Spokane. They will
vlilt here with Mr. tnd Mn. A. A.
MicKlnnon before returning to
thtlr horn* in Calgiry.
Mr. tnd Mn. E. s. Jonu htvt re-
"Mikes With Dty Ittltr"
It'l
100%
Pure
s
Midi
In
B.C.
BLEACH
Use it for your household cleaning and laundry work.
Mtnuftctured lolely by
IUPREMA  P0LIIH  CO, LTD.
Vtncouvtr, B.C.
turntd to thtlr home htr* tfttr t
viiit ln Ntlton.
Vtry Rev. D. Finnegin, Ok M. I.
ind Rtv. Joaeph Sctnnell htrt been
viiltlng th* ObUtt I-then.
Mr. aad Mn. R. Btvln tnd amall
diughter, of Invtrmere, htv* bwn
viiltlng with Mr. Btiin'i ptreoti,
Mr. tnd Mn. Bertie.
Mrt Doollng hu hid u h«r guut
Miu Phyllis Ruftl*.
* Mr. tnd Mn. W. I. Wtrdtn hive
trrlved home tfter spending th*
lummer in th* Old Country.
Mn. Fortier, ot Kimbtrlty, wit t
Crinbrook vliltor.
Judge ind Mn. Thompton hivt
returned from Fernie, where they
were viiltlng.
Mr. tnd Mn. K. Oreen tnd Mlu
Ruth Ort«n, of Wycllff, wtr* Crinbrook visitors.
At th* ctrd ptrty given In tht St.
Mtry'i htll J. Getves tnd Mn. Oi-
borne won thi high Koru in bridge.
Mri. Strange tnd Mr. SUnley won
tht high scores in whiit, tht door
priie being won by Mn. Btrnltr.
Mr. Jotttd doing tht drawing. Tht
convenen were Mn. D. Himllton,
Mn. J. Mtrrt tnd Mn. Doree.
At tht mettlng of the Crinbrook
Rotary club, Preildent Sulllvtn
mtdt t presentation to A. J. C.
Chliholm, tecretiry for the put
leveral years, who hu bten luper-
tnnutted from the customs urvlct.
He stated thtt tht mettlng wu ont
of Joy In the knowledge thit Mr.
Chrlsholm wu retiring from tctjvt
work, tnd sorrow it hli leivlng
Crinbrook. Mr. Chliholm wu presented with a htndiome piece of
silverware u t token ot ippreclitlon ot hit valuable ttrvlce u club
secretiry. Mr. Chliholm mtdt t
brief reply thinking the club for
thetr remembrance tnd for their
good fellowship prevailing in tht
club. Two new memben were welcomed Into tht club Fred Ryckmtn
ind Arthur Bowley. Chirlw Bennett, tudltor for tht Ctnidlan Bank
ot Commerce, wu t guut it the
club.
Mr. ind Mn. A. Chliholm htvt
left for Sin Diego. Ctlifornlt, whert
they will ipeno the winter.
Mlu Lily Mttion li a guett ot
Mlu Kty Morrlion tt Klmberlty.
Mr, tnd Mn. H. Thompson tnd
biby diughter, tnd Mn. C. Hamrln
of wtrdner wert Cranbrook vlilt*
on.
Mn. A. MontpeUier ot Moyie It a
Crinbrook vliltor. ,
The home ot Mr. end Mn. T.
Mitheton. tbout two mllu touth of
town, wu completely dutroyed by
fire Tueidiy evening
A meeting of tht Crinbrook Ath*
letlc anoclatlon wu held. The election of officen took plice, ruult*
-PAOI PIVI
ing u followi:
Hoi
-on. Pruldenti—Hon. F. M. Mte*
Phenon, Dr. t. W. Orten tnd City
Engineer Phllpot.
Prtsldent-A. I. Leigh.
Sec-Treu.—Stanley Moffit.
Executive committee—Angus Mc
Phee, trom high ichool; Jtck Mc
Urea, softball. C. A. Sneath, hockey
rtprutntttlve; Miu Gertrude Pit-
more, Central ichool; G. M. Argue,
track tnd titld and W. M. Htrrli,
ex-officio.
The city council offered the it
Kclttion the rink at t reduced ren*
ttl ot $139 for tht nuon. The offer
wu accepted.
Mlu Helen Spruell, who wu ul
led horn* by the duth of her moth*
er, hu returned to Idmonton where
ihe ii ittendlng tht Univenlty.
Rtttlwntket
pairs.
uiutlly  travtl  in
mm*Vm*tX7»'?»)VmV**^^
Ask Your Grocer for
BULMANS
*—FANCY OR
"EATMORE BRAND—FANCY DRY PACK"
Makes
Mora and
|i Better Pies
Per Tin
Richer
in Color
and Finer
in  Flavor
'jl*m»mrmmm*itt«»tl>mmm*ttlm*tmlt^^
I
Thla column ia eonductid by
Mn. M 7 Vlgntu*. A_ ntwt ef a
todal tutur t, including reeepUent,
privttt entarttinmeaa, ptrtoml
item, mtrrltgu. tte.. will tppetr
In thlt oolumn. Ttlaphon* Mn.
Vilnius at btr home. Ut Billet
Mn. J. Foggo. Mill itreet, entertained tht mtmbtn of Mn. Hector
Mickemle'i clrel* ot St Ptul'i
United chureh Thunday tfttmoon
5hen tho** pruent wer* Mn.
htrltt Wattt, Mn. W. I. Shaw,
Mn. M. Dtrrough, Mn. Dtvld Mtloney, Mn. John Stobo, Mn. J. M.
Armttrong, Mn. W. A. Robtrtion,
Mn. R. A. Orlmu, Mn. WlUlam
Dlok, Mn. Fr*d«rlek Johniton tnd
Mn. Mackenilt.
• •  •
Mr. tnd Mn. lohn Ta wu of Ctdtr
Point vliittd Nelion yetttrdiy.
• •  •
Miu Dudlty Blickwood, Hill Mlnu
raid, hu rtturntd trom viiltlng htr
brother-ln-ltw ind tlittr, Mr. md
Mn. WUIltm B. Hunter ln TnU.
• *  •
Biihop of Kootenty Rt, Rev. Adtm
of Vtrnon wu a Nelton visitor yu-
terdiy.
• .  •
Mn. Jotlph DuMont of Bride*
vlllc, who hu been vititing It tht
home on Ctrbonttt itrut of her
brothcr-in-liw tnd iliter, Mr. tnd
Mrt Henri Gtgnon, luvu today
tor htr homt. j
Joieph   Strelt
town yuttrdty.
ot  Kulo  vlilted
Mn. P. W. Weibe of Plulion wu
In Ntlion yuttrdty, leivlng littr
ln th* dty to vltlt friendi In Ymlr.
• •   •
B. N. Sharp, MX, Of tht Dundu
mint, who hat rtturntd from t viiit
to hil family ln Spoktne, vliittd
Ntlion yesterdiy.
• •   •
I. Tltiworth Ittvet thit morning
to mike hit homt in Enchant, Alta.
• •   •
J, C. Hansen ef Sheep Cruk wu
t Ntlion ihopper yuterdty.
C. V. Gtgnon, who hu bun confined to hit horn* on SlUci ttrttt,
It improving.
» . t
Mn. C. I. Prlct tnd htr brothir
Bob Quin. both of Hirrop, motond
to th* city yuterdty.
Mr. and Mn. Oeorg* Htndtrwn
of Sloctn City tpent yuterdty ln
Ntlion.
...
C. I. Squint of Robion wu in
Ntlion Thuradiy.
Te  »
Mn. J. F. Stevmton et Htrrop
vliittd Nelaon yuterdty.
tr *  *
Among ihoppers in town yuterdty wu Mn. 1. Thompion of Soutb
Slocan.
Mr. and Mn. Harry Stevens et
Ymlr vlilted *e eitjr yuterday.
Mn. I. C. Llttleberry, who it viiltlng rtlatlvu at Harrop, tpent yu
terdiy in town.
Mlu N. McOregor ot Crawford
Bty wu in Ntlion ihopplng yuttrdty.
Rev. Clydt Htrviy et Procter
■pent yuterday in If (lion.
lln. L. V. Rolen, Ktrr totrt-
m*ntt, returned lut «v«ning tram
l few weeki vtcttlon tptnt ln Vtn*
couver tnd Spoktne.
Mr. tnd Mrt. C. H. Cooper ot
Ythk tnd thtlr ftmily hivt takin
up reildence tt 130 Silica itrtet.
r •   •  •
Mn. Scott of South Sloctn tpent
yuttrdty in town ihopplng.
Mn. J. W. Dow of Cruton Is In
the city, t gutet tt tht homt of
Mn. W. R. Cimplon.
• •   •
Among ihopptn in Nelion yuterdty wu Mn. W. Friiby of South
Sloctn.
...
Mn. J. W. Clirk. Kerr iptrtmtnti,
who hu betn confined to her nilte,
it Improving.	
Social News
of Rossland
ROSSLAND. B.C Oct. 1»-Tht
memben ot the Women'i luxllltry
to tht Roultnd branch of tht Ctnidlan Legion. B.E.S.L., wtrt guutt
of Mn. F. Leuon it ■ pleutnt u-
cltl githtring in htr homt Wedneidiy evening. Arrangement! were
mad* to entertain the memben of
the Cinadiin Legion tnd thtlr wlvu
it mpptr next month. The following committee! were inpolnttd:
Supptr- Mn. WUIltm Oruly
Jonts, Mn. Thomu Wood tnd Mn.
Chirlu Symmondi.
Intertilnmtnt — Mn. Jimu
Htrdy, Mn. Hirry A. Btthl* tnd
Mn. Howtrd Ferguion.
Flnt priie In Ihe "tet" eontut
wu won by Mn. R. Crawford tnd
the coniolaUon by Mn. Townttnd.
Thoie preMnt were Mr. Arthur
E. Trtfford, Mn. Towniend. Mn.
Wllllim Buick. Mn. J. J. Culllnane
Sr„ Mn. J. J. Cullintn* Jr, Mn. J.
McCulloulh, Mn. Percy E. Ttylor,
Mn. R. Crawford. Mlu Robtrtion,
Mn. T. Wood, Mn. Wlllltm Greily-
Jonei, Mn. Chtrles Symmondi,
Mn. W. F. Un#. Mn. A. O'Reilly,
Mn. M. Power, Mn. Howird Ferguion tnd the hoitui.
• •  *
J. A. Henderion hu returned
from t hunting trip in the Windermere
• •   •
Sidney Nonnin. mining editor ot
the Vincouver Sun. hu lien spending i few dipt In tht dt?, tnd wu
■ guut of t few of the old tlmen
tt t social evening in tht Roultnd
club.
t  *  •
L**nder Mlcklcton of R«v*lltoke,
Roultnd old-tlmtr hu bun r*-
IU*?
<Swt/
«""!     You vm m little ki a t
rmuiuM CATMM .
TOK__T.D0O0-lAilC0.LTD.      Why U*Ot UM th- bcfllT
J&
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 25*
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the
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tlectlon Ui the prtllmlntry lilt c«m-
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or thli city, tht Kootanatin uyt.
Old Surrey theater, Blackfnin
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Royil Eye hotplttl, Wtttrloo rotd,
hta bought the lite to build thereon
t new eye hospital, to coil £100,OW'
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W
 '
	
PAGE SIX *
JMamt latly 5i>w*
Eitibllihed April 22. 1902.
"Inter"    >t British Columbia! Family Newspaper"
AU THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS
Published   erery   morning   except   Sundiy   by
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED.
211   Biker   Street   Nelion.   British   Columbia.
Phone 144. Prlvite Exchinge Connecting ill Departments
Mtmber of the Audit Buretu of Clrculttioni tnd
Thl Canadian Preu Leased Wire News Service.
, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1934.»
ENFORCING GAME LAWS
Recently a New York game warden haled a youth
into court for attempting to sell him two dozen young
bluefish ot less than marketable size. He admitted quite
readily that he had asked the boy if they were for sale;
that he had not been asked to buy them. The lad was
without any legal representation and it looked as though
it was going to be merely another cut-and-dried trial for
a minor infraction of the game laws.
Suddenly, however, a number of volunteer witnesses,
for the defence were projected into the picture, including
several prominent Long Island sportsmen. Led by the
president of th North Shore Game protective association, they testified that there had been a growing tendency on the part of the game guardians to justify their
existence by making a big demonstraton at the expense of
minor and unintentional offenders while allowing major
and influential miscreants complete leeway. The judge
of the court, letting down the bars of decorum to a large
extent, allowed the trial to swing so freely that for a
considerable time it appeared that the game guardian
had become the defendant rather than the youth.
The result, so far as the latter was concerned, was
that he was dismissed- and forgotten, but such has not
been the fate of 150 policemen of the State Conservation Department. The unexpected ending of the charge
against the little bluefish angler has created an unhappy
and disturbing state of affairs among those guardians
of the law, particularly as the matter has receive, considerable publicity.
^   The incident, while not of direct importance to the
g&mtinent as a whole, has pretty general implications.
She business of making a brave show in the area of un-
fesentials so as to cover up gross incompetence in regard
jto duties that really matter, is something all too com-
Mfton in the existence of a number of public bodies and
private individuals.   Some time, sooner or later, the
tuff is bound to be challenged in all probability from a
lost unexpected angle.   The unhappy predicament in
rhich that officious New York game guardian found
aimself, juat at the moment of his pompous glory,
jliontains a lesson that might well bo absorbed in many
fuarters.
MAN WHO DIDN'T GET TO PARIS
The report telling of the death of General von Kluck
in Germany undoubtedly came as a surprise to many who
clearly recalled the .early days of the Great War. The
surprise was not that tho general should have died but
because of the discovery that he had not passed on before.
In the great German drive of 1914 it was von Kluck
who led the forces that caused the famous British retreat from Mons. With Paris seemingly doomed, his
name became a household word, not only in Germany but
throughout thc world. Then came the turn in thc battle.
His name ceased to be synonymous with crushing success.
Early in 1915 a burst of shrapnel put him out of active
service and, as far as the casual students of history were
concerned, his wounds might as well have been fatal.
Had he received them at the height of that first,
terrific onslaught of 1914, the course of history might
have been altered very greatly. Certainly he would have
achieved a place as h national hero had he been incapaci-
ated before the Marne. There are so many "if's" in military history, though. It was his fate that his death, at
the age of 88, aroused comment from the man in the
street such as, "Why, I thought he was gone years ago,"
or, "isn't it remarkable how many generals live to a ripe
old age?"
THE FIRST AERONAUT
i-'rom Vincenzo Lunardi to Jean Piccard, Max Co-
syns and Van de Elst and other aeronauts of 1934 is a
matter of only a century and a half. Lunardi's balloon,
filled with hot air, rose from the Artillery Grounds,
Moorsfields, London, on September 15, 1784, its flight
watched by 150,000 spectators, among whom were the
Prince of Wales, Fox, Eurke and Sheridan. The crowd
which had been incredulous, even menacing, went wild
with enthusiasm. A conference of the King with his
Ministers broke up to witness the monster floating
through the air, and a jury acquitted a prisoner forthwith to watch the novel sight. The balloon came to earth
within two and a quarter hours after a flight of twenty-
six miles. Lunardi's comparatively small flyer had a
diameter of thirty-three feet and rose 600 feet. Picccard's
aerial venture is as tall as a ten-story building, requires
a ground crew of 200 men and is designed to explore the
unknown region of the straosphere some ten mile« up.
The pioneer acrona'it enjoyed the first bird' -ve view
of London. Piccard and the moderns mount upward to
get acquainted with the cosmic ray.
Between
You and
Me'
By J. B. C.
HOCKEY IN THE AIR
Winter must be in the air. Out
Fairview way yesteaday I watched
a bunch of young lr - on the Hume
school grounds playing hockey on
the ground. They were stickhan-
tf'ng and shooting in great style.
It must be a sign of winter, but
what I wonder is how ' ds can dig
up a last winter's hockey stick. They
are usually the most wanted and
unavailable thin*? at this time of
year, especially if there are young
brothen in the house. However, I
am glad'to see the boys playing
with hockey sticks, even on bare
ground. It gives them the feel of
the stick and the id . of how it
should be handled. I know for a
fact that some of our most prominent hockey players have learned
and perfected their stickhandling
b;* playing with a matchblock or
tin can on a sidewalk during the
pre and after winter season.
* *   •
GETTING BACK TO SCHOOL
. Sat for a time wailing for a friend
behind the Hume school. He was in
visiting Rev. Mr. SUvcrwood who
is indisposed, but is on the mend.
While musing and puffing my pipe
I looked over thc Hume school
building and thought about old
times. Remember when there were
but two rooms to the brick structure and it made a great place
for the bouncing of tennis balls.
Thought of the good idea of providing a hand-railing on the wall
side of thc fire escape. Wondered
when they intend painting the old
wooden school buildin*-. It is now
uied as a gymnasium. It has the
same paint it had on there, well
must be 20 yeare ago. Recalled playing "Aunty, Aunty High Over," hope
thit is the way they spell lt. We
did it over the old wooden building and used to break a window a
week. Recalled thc old slide-for
life and other things that made
school days happy.
• •   •
OUT FAIRVIEW WAY
Talked for a time with Alderman
Ross "' -ming who plans a trip this
week-end—He didn t say Juat where
he was going—wc discussed Kokanee Glacier park—and its scenic
wonders—Alderman Fleming was
weighing out brown sugar—and R.
S. Brereton was there waiting to
get a word In—Noticed the street
railway men are doing a fine job
on the track on Behnsen street-
Made eyes at Eric Chapman's baby
boy—They call him Bobbie and he
has big dark eyes like his mother—I
know Eric won't mind that reference—for after all Mrs. Chapman
used to belong to our staff on this
paper-
Dick Barnes swung hii nice car
down the street and <-irked beside
his home—a man was clearing up
his front yard—Con Cummins was
complaining of trouble with his
nose—Seems to have a boil In the
proce s of getting somewhere—Art
Bush spoke of newspaper men travelling in pairs for protection sake-
Spurge Langill was looking for a
black widow spider—George Massey
has a nice home in Fairview—Keeps
in nice repair—Recalled the days
when Len Gobe resided on Third
street and wc stole his plums and
cherries—I think "Silent" Bill Jones
r. 'des In that neighborhood now—
Did you ever hear Bill in an argument?—Sneak up on him sometime.
STORMS SHATTER
'MIRRORS'
Thunderstorms shatter the radio
"mirrors" of electrical particles hundreds of miles above the earth and
bring "bad luck" to radio listeners
In the form of poor reception. This,
in substance, is the report of J. A.
Ratcliffe, of Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, to the British Association for thc Advancement of
Science.
The radio "mirrors," which reflect
radio waves and make possible
transmission over long distances,
are in thc ionosphere. Each mirror
is a layer of air atoms split apart
and in this way electrified. Radio
waves bounce off the under side of
these layers and are reflected back
to earth. Mr. Ratcliffe used radio
signals to study the height of such
reflcctir. layers during thunderstorms. The method is essentially
an "echo" one and similar to the
system of determining the depths
of the ocean by sending sound
waves and waiting for the echo.
He found one electrical layer 78
miles above the earth before a
thunderstorm arrived. During the
storm the electrical discharge pushed the layer down to 65 miles. With
the cessation of the storm the height
of the layer rose again to 78 miles,
but within fifteen minutes it mounted to 93 miles. The electrical reflecting surface, therefore, undergoes great oscillatory motion during the storm.
Because of the up and down motion the fidelity of radio reception
varies d'oring the thunderstorm
just as a beam of light reflected
from a still pool is greatly different
from that reflected by the water in
the pool when waves arc stirred up
in it.
THE NELSON DAILY NEWI. NELSON. B.C~-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934 *
STONE OF SCONE TO BE IN THE
PUBLIC EYE
A ipeciil object of Interest, even
veneration, wlil be the Coronation
chair, datli fro a the time of -W-
wtrd I, and enclosing the "stone of
destiny" — the Stone of Scone —
when the royal jubilee celebration
take: place next year.
Betore Edward I carried lt to
England the kings of Scc.land had
been crowned, while leatc' c * it,'
for centuries. The chair ii Kept in
Westminster Abbey, covered with
a cloth of gold.
As the accepted itory of the coronation stone goes it originally came
from Egypt. From Egypt it waa
taken to Spain. And then there was
a king of Spain who wanted to conquer Ireland. In hii i overweening
pride he took the stone with him
that he might be crowned king of
Ireland on it. But the Irish beat
him and robbed him ot his stone.
It went to Scotland ln the wars,
it came to England in the wars. War
took the st*****"- from r'-ce to I'-re.
The ' jigs of Scotland were crowned on tt up to and including John
Balliol. Then the English kl ((i up
to and Including the present King.
There Is a legend, of whatever
credibility that suffragette bomb
placed on the chair exploded but
damaged neither chair nor stone.
Another tale touches the imagination, but lacks probability, despite
its atmosphere. It concerns the innumerable initials carved on the
worn timbers of the coronation
chair. Many people blame the
Westminster boys, and the itory is
that one of them got himself locked
in the abbey all night to carve his
name on the seat itself.
One nlctures him In tht twilight
with those king's tombi ill round
him, and Edward Ill's sword tnd
shield beside him, md tht helm
md taddle of the victor ot Agin-
court on the beam ibove, forming
weird shipes: the Westminster boy
who declared ill poslble historic
ghosts surely deserves hli baUad!
"I hoped Uut the German guide
who annotated so comprehensively
for his large flock wu telling thii
story," comments t recent writer,
who viewed the itone with othet
curious observers. "Certainly the
French guide, with a scarcely smaller flock, omitted it. He wis logic-
cal ana exact, dropping 'dry1 facts
like biscuits.' He went very quickly
past the chair md the itone. But
he paused at Edward Ill's iword of
state. 'Grande epee,' he said firmly,
'huit kilos!' "
Round the stone, which, legend
says, ii the one used as a plUow by
Jacob, appears the words engraved
on tt: "lf fatei go right, where'er
this stone ii found, the Scots of thlt
realm be found."
There li mother coronation atone
In England, 'twas uied by the ancient Saxon kings. Its royal purposes are abandoned. It stands in
the market place of Kingston. It
also contains inscriptions — the
names of seven kings—but lt has
altogether failed to attach to itself
a living md growing legend. It Is
black, and has a lumpish thrusting
shape such as one would expect of
a sacred stone. And the Kingston
inhabitants are very proud of it.
It mlrron the name of the town.
GARGLING FOR SORE THROAT HAS
BEEN PROVEN OF NO GREAT VALUE
That popular method of nesting
a sore throat, gargling, hu been subjected to scientific scrutiny and
found  wanting.
"Gargling Is Ineffective and should
be replaced by the gravity Irrigation
method," Dr». William Snow and J.
K. Stern, of New -Tork, reported to
the American Medical association.
Their conclusion was baaed on
tests ln which subjects gargled wltb
a thin .liquid suspension of barium
while x-ray picture! of the head
and neck were made. The subjects
tried violent gargling, gentle gargling and tilting the head backward
and letting the liquid run aa fu
back as poaalble without gargling
The X-ray pictures ahowed that
with all these methods the tongue
ti firmly pressed agalnit the soft
palate ln auch a way that tbe liquid can not reach tbe throat.
Gravity Irrigation! with the held
and neck bent, such as many physicians use tn treating the throat,
were found to be lucoeuful ln getting the liquid back Into the throat.
CONTRACT
. BRIDGE
By E. V. SHEPARD
"Teacher of Teachers"
A VERY IMPORTANT RULE
Some rulei ire important enough
to embroider on some players' pyjamas, so that they may be read
night and morning. Here is one
such rule: With the same top honor the shorter the suit the greater
iti probable defensive value. Discregard of thia important rule alone
enabled South'! opponents to icore
game and rubber. Perhaps he will
be more careful next time.
I
♦ 10 61
ftlt
♦ 10 9 8
♦ 8746
♦ A742
VK664
♦ A2
f-AlOZ
77.
i
♦ KQ9S
tAJS
♦ 64 »
♦ 948
HUMANS INHABITED JAVA 40,000
YEARS AGO
Homo soloensli, a prehistoric race
that lived ln Java 40,000 years or
more ago, had tool! and weapon! resembling those of Neanderthal Man
In Europe..
Thla li the conclusion of Dr. P. V.
Van Stein Callcnfels, based on a
study of a large collection of audi
Implement! ot itone, bone and horn
collected on a terrace of the River
Solo. Thla terrace wu apparently
formed during pleistocene or loe
Age times. The animal bonea found
associated with the relic* of human
occupation Included an extinct elephant, a hlppopotamua, and other
anlmala no longer known ln Java.
THE ULTIMATE
FLEA
Drouoht Endangers
Plants in Winter
There arc droughts in winter as
well as in summer, and the winter
droughts are as likely to cause severe damage to plants that have to
face them, said Prof. Howard E.
Pulling of Wellesley College, In
an address at Bostoi under the auspices of Science Service.
"When a northerner talks of
plants being winter-killed, he generally thinks that they die of cold.
This is rarely true for any but tropical olants," Prof. Pulling explained. "For instance, those evergreens
that were transplanted this fall
have damaged roots. Unless they
are given extra amount/ of water
Just as long as the ground can absorb It, they may enter the winter
without enough to last them until
snrinr. When what Chaucer called
the "Drought of Mnrch" arrives with
Its bright sun and high winds, the
last of their inadequate stores will
vanish into the air, and almost over
night they will turn brown and probably die."
Emma Goldman finds the close ot
her revolutionary days bitter and
tragic. The Bourbons,. bourgeoise,
capitalistic police agents, md old
time exploiters are not the dark
figures on her clouded horizon. The
oppressors are the radicals, the extremists, md the men of blood and
iron who have sought and obtained
power in the name of revolution
md humanity.
Russia is no land of light md hope
to this veteran of revolutionary
thought It is only mother land of
tyranny and oppression. Emma says
that the barbarity ot Fascism and
Naiism is condemned by persons
indifefrent to the "Golgotha of the
Russian politicals."
"Men and women with a heroic
record of revolutionary activity,
persons who have consecrated
themselves to their ideals, who went
through untold sufferings under the
Romanoffs, are maligned, misrepresented, dubbed with vile names,
and hounded without mercy." Emma names some of the victims —
Nikolai Rogdayeve, Katherine Bre*
shkovsky, Maria Spiridonova, Angelica Balabonor. These and other
pioneers of Russian revolution who
suffered under czardom have had
a martyrdom of arrest, exile, torture, md death under the G.P.U.
md Stalin's commi* lata.
The terrorism under Fascism and
Naziism, the martyrdom of Erich
Muhsam, the agony of Enrico Mal-
atesta, Emma Ts forced to understand, the doctrines of present day
Germany and Italy being for the
extermination of the anarchists and
Anarcho-syndicalists.
Emma, in brief, ii merely surveying a familiar scene. "Great fleas
have little fleas upon their backs to
bite 'em, md little fleas have lesser
fleas, md so on ad infinitum. And
bt great fleas themselves, in turn,
have greater fleas to go on, while
these again have greater still md
greater still, md so on."
Some aspects of Simeon Fess
might appear dangerously radical
to Andrew Mellon, although it
would pain Mr. Fess to discover it.
Dr. Tugtfell, if he gave Mr. Fess a
thought, would think of him as
something geological rather than
biological. Norman Thomas regards Dr. Tugwell as a half-baked
theorists, with his feet stuck in
Tory capitalism. Zack Foster regards Dr. Thomai as a dilettante
evangelist whose ideas are too
feeble to merit the consideration
of an intelligent revolutionary.
Zack is regarded by the comrades
ot the Third Internationale as a
skimmed milk representative of
Marxism In a land ripe for the overthrow of capitalism. And so It
goes.
The curious, open-mouthed person, thinking that somewhere there
must be m Idea to oure, so transparently and dominatingly altruistic
that it would stand out as the final
haven ot mm, the safe harbor of
all his aspirations and agonized
efforts to attain the unattainable,
seeks in vain. Whatever form Eden
lakes, from some part of lt arises the
Bronx cheer of a critic who has
looked it over and found it wron».
No idealist ii ideal. No radical Is
radical enough for some other radical. No one's purposes are sufficiently free from dron, impurity,
and stupidity to comms-1 the unrestricted admiration of tome one
else with other plans.
Each critic haa hia critics, each
revolutionary his transcend-otai
opponent, each flea his other fleas.
Somewhere there ought to be the
ultimate flea whom no one could
reach, a flea unvexed by any others.
But he Is never discovered.
AUNT HET
"Maybe Tom don't care If his wife
smokes But If that's so. he don't
care what else she does, either "
♦ J 8
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♦ KQJ
South's score stood tt 80 points—
the worst possible time to make a
light opening bid. His opponents
were vulnerable, with no score toward! the second game. Bidding
went: South 1 diamond, wett doubled, East, 1 spade, South 2 dlamondi, West 3 spades, to urge partner to bid game, provided he held
4 probable tricks; East, 4 spades,
by slightly stretching his values,
ending bidding.
As most playen would have done,
South lead hli K of diamonds,
dummy's ace won the trick. Three
rounds of trumps followed, leavinr
the lead in dummy. A low heart
was led. South's Q won on a finesse
of the J. South led hii K of clubs.
Dummy's ace won. The ace, K md
a long heart ln dummy won the
next 3 tricks. The declare discarded ■ losing club on dummy's lonn
hetrt. Nine tricks had been plryed,
of which the declaring side had
won 8.
South was given a diamond trick.
Then he took a club trick, giving
him his third md last trick. Dummy's last trump ruffed the last
diamond held by Eait, and the declarer's last trump rutted the third
club beld by dummy.
The average defensive value of 8
cards headed by K-Q-J is only 0.84
of t trick. The average defensive
value of 3 cards consisting of
K-Q-J is 1.34 tricks agalnit a trump
call, or just one-ha'' probable
trick greater than the same honors
in the longer suit. It Is proper to
open thc longer suit at no trumps,
or against a trump call when you
wish to weaken the declarer by
constantly ruffing him. In this case
South should have led his K of
clubt, instead of the K of the longer suit.
The opening lead of the K of
clubi will give the defenc- rs 2
club tricks, 1 heart trick and 1 diamond trick. This will def ea' the contract a single trick. It you must lead
a K from K-Q, lead it from i long
suit, but leid the K from K-Q-J
from a shorter suit. These rules tor
making opening leads arc ot vital
importance.
TEN YEARS AGO
QUESTIONING THE NEUROTIC PATIENT
BY JAMES W  BARTON, M.O.
BRITISH DEATH
DUTIES
It is exactly forty years, the London Observer says since Great Britain first imposed death duties on
all property, whether real or personal, settled or unsettled — "the
greatest financial revolution since
Walpole," as it was once called. This
was not the first British "death
duty" ever enacted. A probate duty
was first imposed in 1894; a legacy
duty in 1780, md a succession duty
in 1853 but it was not until 1894
that a graduated tax was imposed
on the full value of estates.
I The Observer recordi the gross
amount collected from the death
duties since August, 1894, as £1,493 -
962,806, of which more than £1,000 -
000,000 has been collected since the
closing of the war. "It Is interesting."
that newspaper comments, "to consider how much greater thc national
income would be today "iad the £1 -
493,000,000 been left Intact Reckoning a yield of 5 per cent, It would
have been about £75,000,000 a year
greater, on which income tax and
surtax would jyie!d about £30,000.-
000."
There probably are fewer than
100 trumpeter swans left in thc
United States.
FIRST AID MIGHT HAVE
SAVED BARTHOU
According to reports of the Marseilles double tragedy. Louis Barthou, French Foreign Minister, literally bled to death because the
taxi in which he waa being taken
to a hospital was delayed for two
hours in a traffic jam and the oo-
iceman accompanying him did not
know how to apply a tourniquet
properly.
This provides a ihockingly striking example of the value of universal training in first aid. Barthou's
life might have been saved by
knowledge possessed by many a
school boy in America and doubtless in France, also, Science Service points out.
The first principle of first aia
treatment is to keep the patient
lying down, without moving him
from the scene of the accHent,
until a physician arrive! or It has
been determined that the injury is
not serious.
"Keep cool and do not be hurried
into moving the injured person, unless absoluWv necessery, until a
clear idee of the neture and er»*snt
of the Injury is obtained end first
aid has been rendered," is the first
step Is directions for the first aid
issued by the Red Crois.
The necessity of moving the injured person is of courie r* •••--'ter
of judgement, but !■ wer.-"*** t-'cen
to mean moving him from a gas-
fil'ed room into the open air oi from
a bt|ming building or other dang-
eroui spot.
(From Nelaon Dilly Newi of Oct.
27,1924)
Jtck Wright, former Nelson boy,
md member ot the Canadian Davis
cup team, won another title when
he beat D. R. Morrice In the final
for Canadian indoor tennis championship at Montreal.
•   .   •
Joseph Smith, prominent Nelson
sports worker, died here yesterday
at the age of 42.
»   •   •
William Irvine, a Nelson delegate
to the grand lodge of Knights of
Pythias held at Revelstoke reported that over 300 were present. New
lodgei had been started during the
year at Kimberley, Corbin and
North Bend, he said.
20 YEAttS AGO
(From Nelion Dtlly Newt of Oct.
27,1913)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller have
returned from a trip to Halifax.
• *   *
W. R. Cochrane, police magistrate at Grand Forks, is a Nelson
visitor.
• *   *
R. Randolph Bruce of Wllmer
spent yesterday here and will leave
today by Crow boat for his home.
\.   .   .
Construction h-s been started by
J. S. Deschamps, Rossland lum*-**.*-
man, ot t new mill nt Kirnalr**1. It
will have a capacity of 20,000 feet
per day. >
30 YEARS AGO
(From Nelson Dally Newi of Oot.
27,1904)
J. W. Ross, J. P., died Oct. 25 at
his home tt Ymlr.   He had resided there, since 1897.
^       •   •   •
W. B. Poole of Nelson has been
name 1 president and director of
Great Northern Mine-  I td.
• •   *
Born, Oct. 28, to Mr. and Mrs.
William Darcy, McDonald block, a
daughter.
• •   «
J. E. Annable has received a letter from his brother who is Conservative candidate for a federal
seat in Asslniboia, declaring that
even money was being bet at Reglna that the Conservatives will
carry the general election.
A patient may consult a number
of pbyalclana who, after examination,
cannot find any c uu for the symptoms oi which the patient complains.
Tbe examination! may Include the
teeth, tonsils, nose, throat, metabollam teat—rate it which the body
proceaeea work when at reat—x-ray
examination! and examination ot
blood, urine, and fiecea—waitei from
lnteatlne.
Some physicians wlll dlacuu the
aymptomt carefully and try to abow
the patient that even lt they are
present there li nothing about them
that need cauae any worry, other
phya'lchni may bluntly itate tbat
there li really nothing wrong becauu the complete and thorough
examination reveala no trouble.
Now there may not be an; physical or organic trouble, but there
la trouble somewhere and lt li the
patient psychiatrist or nerve specialist to whom the patient is uae-lly
unt thit fimlly geta at the cauae
of the lymptoma.
From the hlsto-y of the case ai
supplied him by the other pbyalclana and by hli flrat questioning
of the patient, he knows that there
la no organic symptoms and that
tbe   patient   haa  some   reason   for
hiving thi lymptomi or complaints
of tbe symptom!.
Ai Dr. D. Thorn ln the America
Journal of paychlatry polnti ou
the question la, "Wbat purpose dol
the neurdala -imaginary symptoms-
serve ln the life of the Indlviduill
In other words there la Krrxtbli
In the home, bualneae or profeMlom
life of the patient tbit u upeettlt
the patlent'a balance to aome extol
and he or abe li utlng tht "aym|
toma" aa a aort of outlet or pn
tectlon.
ThU meam tbat tbe doctor h
to queatlon and queatlon tbe
tlent to find out Juit whit li "ui
derneith." It may be a feeling I
Injustice In thi office, a lack
love ot reaped in tbe bome. perha
a Uttle Jealouay, not getting hil i
her own way about thlnga, a ftelli
of belnt alighted, or aome oth
alight or serious matter.
It Isn't any wonder that eiamln
tloni by these psychiatrists an loi
and frequent as It take* some tin
to get the Pitlent'e confidence li
have him fully unburden him"
about bis "wrongs." The peychlatrl
finally learni the "reiaon" for
symptoms and treats tbl patient ■
cordlngly.
WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN
For Western and Central Ctnada,
embracing British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and
Ontario.
Monday, Oct. 39, 1934.—In most
sections of the c.ntral provinces
slightly warmer and unsettled, with
light precipitation, especially about
the south and south-eastern sections.
Tuesday, Oct. 30. — Unsettled
weathtr ln general, but not much
Changs In temperatures. Most of
clouds carrying preclptatlon drift
tb Oreat Lakes regions and southeast.
Wednesday, Oct. 31. — Xn west
changes to colder and ln general
becomes clearer except about the
southeast of central provinces and
on Pacific slope, where light precipitation Is expected.
Thursday, Hoy 1.—-Generally clear,
mild weather, but a cold wave aoon
develops ln the northwest, though
ln southeast temperatures remain
nearly stationary with some precipitation.
Friday, Nov. 2.—Weather ln nearly
all sections now turns clearer and
colder, with but light preclptatlon,
moslty ln southeastern sections.
Saturday, Nov. 8.—This Is a per-
lad of clear, cold weather In nearly
all sections, though about this time
some moderating ln tbe west.   -
Sunday, Nov. 4. -Generally clear
and cold, but ln central regions
clouds up and In a few spots very
light snows, mostly about the Great
Lakes regions.
Week Oct. 39 to No. 4, 1934, ln
central provinces begins with mild
or warm. weather for the season
and probably some precipitation,
thought no heavy storm Is expected
during the week. About Nov. 3 a
clearing spell sets In from the west
and temperatures in general decline
to lower levels. At last ot week lrt
oentral and southeastern sections
some cloudy weather is expected
but probably not much preclptatlon.
though light snows may occur along
ths southern borders and In the
regions about Great Lakes of Manitoba
With the beginning of November
In theee regions the winter cold
moet generally sets ln with a cold
spap, and this week the comparatively mild weather of late autumn
will  probably give way to a clear.
cold spell, permanently closing
open waters wtth the winter
In the basin of the aouth Saak
chewan river and most sections n
the southern borders there
however, several warmer periods
to the last of December. ThU j
the milder days, according to
charted forecasts, would seem
come about November IS, SS,
and In December near 15 and 37.
CUSHION SOCKET
COMFORT
FOR OLD A NEW LIMB
Ciliary Artificial Limb Factory
Caloary. Alt!.
Ruptured?
Aftir Handling Truasei miny
yun wi hive decided thi
' .TTLE DOCTOR TRUSJ
le thi belt on thi mu
feet, and ti tbe anawi
to all rupture auffir
era Neat, almple, effl
clent. no ateel to ru»
no elaatlc. no pm
sure on the bick c
hlpa no leg atrip
weight 0 oz No mlt
ter now good vour true
ta If Interested ln tb
neweit and best, al
thli one Free demonstration. Al
work done lubject to your doc
tor'e approval unlimited fr*
aervlce at ur one of 200 Weit.
ern Aaenti.
WRITE TO
SCHIND'.ER ARTIFICIAL
LIMB CO.
407 Sprague Ave., Spokini, Wuk
ts*S«!W'"W"ffiraa!!»K1S
"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS"
When
Other
Baby
Fall Sown Annuals    Food
Failed
By DEAN HALLIDAY
Central Pren Girden Expert
In most seed catalogues you will
find directions for planting annuals
something like this: "Sow seed in
open ground as soon as all danger
from frost is past." ,
Once in a while you will read of
planti that should be started early
indoori, as they have a long period
of growth before flowering, and
would not otherwise come to maturity.
Mention Is rarely made of a third
possible and very practical way of
sowing seed, though it is often the
most satisfactory way of all. This
is to sow the teed in the fall. The
process Is no different from the
sowing of seed in the spring, but it
il done either late in the fall just
before a freeze, or else somewhat
earlier, so as to give the plants a
chance to germinate and become
husky young seedlings before winter sets ln ■
Many of our native annuals live
over in this way, and there is no
reason why the grrden plants should
not do so as well. When a tender
plant like chhkweed can live ovm
from plants which germinated in
the fall, to become the rank garden
pest that it is in th" spring doesn't it
seem lotical thit other plants less
tender should be able to do the
same?
m
Mothers forced to find a substltu
food for their babies have bee
gratefully surprised to find in Pt
cific Milk—so easily obtained an
at so little cost—just the nourisl
ment they have been seeking. Tt
in a number of cases Pacific Mil
has proven itself when all othi
foods have failed. It has even n
stored children who were seriousl
ill.   Doctors recommend iL
Pacific Milk
•100% B.C Owned md Controlled
Plint it Abbutstord
'«? ■•trttimiMSili
tot
MINING CAMPS
Unsanded Cottonwood
panels are a suitable
grade for all mining
and other camp build-
in**?. It is strong
. waterproof, light and
very easy to handle.
District Distributor!
Wood, Val a   ce
Hardware Co.; Ltd.
"FESS"
Oil Heating
in your home will add
much to your enjoyment
of life.
IT'S QUIET
IT'S AUTOMATIC
IT'S CONVENIENT
Phom ui ind we wlll demon-
•trite thli auperlor oil burner.
KOOTENAY
Plir-ins*.' Heating
Compiny, Limited
Skoting on Water
The belt lubrlc ti allow motion
between two pieces of metal /hen
they act ln the fashion of a small
boy ikating on Ice, lays "Science."
Where high pressure and elttreme
temperaturei occur the best lubricants are not the conveniently
pistelike greases but solid wax-like
materials. Such lubricants act very
much as ice does under the runner
of a skate; they turn to i liquid and
then back to the solid form. Dr.
Willlsmi pc'nled out thit one reall
ikates on a film of witer formed
by the pressure of ■ skite runner.
The water turns back to solid ice
as soon as the pressure ia removed.
WHAT!
About that furnace of yours, does it
need repairing before the cold weather? Get our Expert to look it over.
Heaters at All Prices
Nelson Hardware Co»
Wholesale and Retail Quality Hardware
Nelton, B.C.
,
 —
—
NET STAR WEDS
Track ond Field - Fishing - Motor Booting - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football
MIh Virginia Rice, tennli itar, and her husband, Mel Johnson.
JOE CR0N1N, BOY MANAGER,
SOLD FOR COOL $150,000
^     ————^——
■Baseball's Biggest Deal Sends Joe From the
Senators to Boston Red Sox; He Get?
a Five-Year Contract
latlg
•$___•
Npuis
Baseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse U Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.
PAOI SEVEN
-THI NIUON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. 27. 1934-
PAGE SEVIN   Theie husklei form the forward wall of the Fordhim university teim.
JOI CRO
■y BILL KINO
(Aneclatid  Prill Sporti Writer)
BOSTON, Oct. 26 (AP).—
Baseball's biggest deal, the
1150,000 purchase of Play-
ing-Manager Joe Cronin from
Washin-jton Senators, today
increased Tom Yawkey's investment in Boston Red Sox
to well.over the $3,000,000
mark.
And he's just itching to
spend additional hundreds of
thousands on the club that is
the pet of his numerous and
widely scattered holdings.
Clark Griffith, veteran owner
of Senators, stunned the baseball world by announcing
from Washington he had sold
Cronin for a price that even
overshadowed the Babe Ruth
purchase tag of $126,000.
Not only did Yawkey part
with $150,000 cash but he
also-threw in Lyn Lary, the
smart-fielding shortstop, for
whom about $35,000 was paid
the Yankees in a mid-season
deal.
Cronin will be given a five-
year contract it is intimated
Known as "Boy Manager
No. 2," Cronin succeeds Stanley (Bucky) Harris, baseball's original youthful mas-
:er mind.
Zupp Taket "Tickle"
ut of "Ptp" Tolk
JACK RILEY IS
MENTIONEDAS
AMERMAN
Newsy Lalonde Hopes
Him to Fill Morenz'
Place
] Grimm Adds Young
Catcher to Team
CHICAOO, Oct. 28 (AP)-Charlle
Grimm, mmager ot Chicago Cubi
aad elected to a vice-preiidency today, made hi! flnt move to itretigth-
en the team for IMS by trading the
veteran pitcher. Pat Malone, to St.
Louii Cardinal!, for a promliing
young catcher, James O'Dae.i
O'Die ii 21 yean old, • ilx-footer
and weight ISO poundi. He played
with the Columbui club of the
American association lait year and
batted .263 for 111 garnet.
FATHER WELL
KNOWN HERE
MONCTON KEEPS HER HAWKS
AS BODYGUARD FOR TROPHY
Percy Nlcklln
Determined to Retain
Allan Cup; Shy of
Pro Contracts
■y VICTOR SERVICE
Central Pren Cinadlan Sporti
Wrlttr
MONCTON, N.B., Oct. 26.-There
lint a chance In the world Moncton
Hawka, twice
1 n lucceitlon
, amateur chimpion! ot Canada, and alao in
1934 V. S.
champs, being
broken up by
raids of National Hockey
' League clubi,
according to
■ Percy Nlcklln,
of Fort Prances,
Ontario, coach
ol the Allan
Cup holden.
Sammy Mc-
Maims, of Toronto and Aubrey Webster,
of Kenora, wingers on the Hawks,
will only work out with the Montreal Maroons, sayi Nicklin. McManui and Webster were offered
contraclt by the Maroons, but refuted to sign. The vital reason ii
that the aalary offered wai not
much better than thit available
from the Hawks. A contributing
factor was that the going ll much
tougher in the N.H.L. thin in tha
amateur rinks. Still another phaie
ii that the Hawks' promoter! want
to be fint to win the Allan mug
thrice In luccesiion. Moreover,
winning tor 1939 will install the
Hawka as representatives of Canada at the 1936 Olympic games.
McManus and Webster will return to the Hawks for the tint
eime In the Maritime Hockey
cague, which Includes Halifax
Wolves, St. John Beavers and Chir-
lottetown Abbiea. Bert Connolly, of
Montreal, Hawk wingman and
center, tried out with New York
MERCURY
GOAL
The heuttwivti' delight
—no clinkers—No 'dirt
—burm te ths lait cinder—For range, heater er
furnace yen csnnet best
thit coal — Try t Ten
Today
LUMP — STOVE
$10.50     $9.00
JHONi 797
POR COAL tERVICE
RENWICKS
Rangen lut fall and will repeat
this year. There ll no doubt about
him returning to the maritime
hockey wan. The Hawki club ll in
favor of their playen working out
with major league rotten, thui
gaining valuable experience for the
playen and the team.
NO PRO. SIGNERS
Since the cloae ot the 1934 season
potential signers with N.H.L. clubs
have repudiated their reported intentions.
Bill Gill, of Broadview, Saik.,
giant bad man on defence, wu to
nave Joined thc Boiton Bruin! or
Detroit Red Wingi. Jimmy Foiter,
of Winnipeg, snippy goalie, wai
rumored replacing the late "Chuck"
Gardiner in Chicago Black Hawk
cage. Bill Miller, of Campbellton.
N.B., center and defenceman, wu
scheduled to book with Bruim.
All the champlonahlp team ot the
put two seasons will be available
for the 34-35 season, K ii claimed
by Pilot Nicklin, who welded together a machine assembled from
every province in Canada except
British Columbia.
At goal will be Jimmy Foster, ot
Winnipeg. Foater ii one of the best
of amateur goalies in Canada. He
graduated from junior championship hockey with Elmwoodi of Winnipeg direct to the Hawks.
On the defence the Hawki will
hive Bill Gill, Len Burrage, Winnipeg, and Gordon McLean, alio ot
Winnipeg. Bill Miller of Campbell-
ton, N.B,, will do utility duty on the
barrier, but with the acquisition Ot
McLeln il expected to be seen more
offensively. McLean ll new to the
Hawki.
For the offence, the Moncton
birdi of hockey, prey have: McManus, Toronto; Weblter, Kenora,
Ont.; Duke McDonald, Winnipeg;
Monty Muckle, Winnipeg; Dud
Jamea, Sunny Brae, N.B.; Bill Miller, Cimpbellton, N.B.; Bert Connolly, Montreil; Nucker Irvine, Freder-
icton, N.B.; Charlie Manhall, Ottawa, with possibility of Rene Bou-
dreau, of Montreal, formerly a
junior hockeylit at Moncton, alio
being on the list. James la the only
resident of the Moncton zone Included, his home, Sunny Brae, being
a Moncton suburb. Manhall, the
offence acquisition, wai a right
winger for Ottawa Shamrocki ln
their tour ot Europe lut winter.
SETTER PAID
Conilderable trouble within the
Hawki hai been reported again this
icaion, but thii will be tolerated,
It li uld. Just is last winter, because of the objective. The Moncton backer! are zeiloui in their
effort to place Moncton on the Olympic hockey map, and to eitab-
jlih Moncton u the only community to cop the big Allan trophy
thrice in lucceitlon. Aa for the
playen, they reallie they are getting better wagea than prevailing in
any of the minor pro hockey circuits, with lesi hazards and strumous buffeting typlctl of the proi.
In the International and Canadian-American hockey leagues, top
silify lut leuon and thii season,
li tw weekly during the leaion.
Some of the playen In theie routes,
are getting only S30 weekly. Whereas, the Hawki are being paid $35 to
M0 per week from the tint hockey
tun till the skates are tucked away.
By AL DEMAREE
The college drum major and the
college cheer leaden take them-
lelvei juit u lerlouily u the member! of the football team, and have
to train almost as hard.
George Hallas of tha Chicago
Bears, profeuional champions, tells
me a good yam on George Trafton,
hli former gigantic center. Trafton
waa pretty well brulaed up around
the body and he uied big piecei ot
raw steak, cut thick under hit uniform to protect hia tore ipota.
During the gama he warmed up
and the iteaka began to feel uncomfortable. Every few minute! he
would reich In hit Jeney and pull
out a piece of raw meat and throw it
away.
The player oppoaite him wai icir-
ed to death, thinking Trafton was
tearing his own flesh apart Bob
Zuppke, coach at Illinoii uys he
hu ordered non-tickliih underwear
tor hit athlete! io they will tike
their work more seriously. Some
player laughed lut year during a
''pep-talk" between halvei and
blamed it on hla fuzzy underwear.
Aniwer to yesterdiy'i quutlon—
John Mantenuto of Rhode Island
made a run of 100 yardi on an intercepted forward pau in 1933.
Today'i queatlon—What player laat
year made the longeit mn bick of
a punt? Aniwer Monday.
TA.A.A. HEAD
LEAVES TRAIL
C. Ltuder Is Trtnsferred to
C.  M.  & S.  Comptny
Offices st Kimberley
Canadiens Start on
Season Training
Program
Ai Lu Canadian!' puck camp be*
Sm to itir with training activities
lek in St. John, N.B., Jack Riley,
tmooth-working itickhandler of the
flying Frenchmen, and ton of Jack
Riley Sr., well-known C.P.R. ex-
prew man. running between Nelion and Vancouver, it being mentioned u a poulble successor to
Howie Morenz on the Jollat and
Laroohelle line.
Manager Lalonde hai decided to
work Jack with Jollat and Laro-
chelle, and it looks like a tow-up
between  the  Vancouver  Iriihmin
TRAIL, B.C., Oet. 2S.-The city
of Kimberley will gain by Trail'!
lou of a capable young man ot
athletic executive abilities; namely,
Gerry Lauder. Mr. Lauder, who for
the pait three yean hu been president of the Trail Amateur Athletic
association hu been -transferred
from the Tadanac office! of the
C. M. k S. company to Kimberley.
He left Trail Friday afternoon on
the 5:25 train.
During hii termi of office the
destiniea ot the aaaoclatlon have
been guided to th* hearty approval
of all membera ot the association
and clubi which it governs.
As il the customary procedure,
W. O. Williami, vice-prendent, will
in all probability take over the
preildential dutlu until next March
or April when the association will
hold iti annual meetinf and election of officen.
Mr. Lauder wai an active participant of rugby up until a few
yun ago and wai one of the belt
swimmers in this dlitrlct.
TORONTO LEAFS
HAVE HARD DAY
GALT, Ont., Oct 26 (CP)-The
Toronto Mipl* Leafi of the Nitlonil
Hockey league today held their
■tiffest practice ao far this leason
with the defence "laying it on" and
handing opposing forward! stiff
Jolta on their way goalwird. Conny
Smythe, here to iee hii Leah perform, addreiied the Kiwanii club
at their luncheon. The Leaf mentor
wai Introduced by "Ace" Ballejr.
Smythe laid pro hockey offered
u much u any profusion. It the
layer took care of himielf and wis
Jirifty, when the time came to hang
up hla skates he would be ln a financial position where he would
not need to worry u to his future.
"TIP" O'NIILL WILL
JOIN VANCOUVIMTIS
CALGARY, Oct. 26 (CP).-
Chirles "Tip" O'Nell. wbo wu given
hil release lut WMk by Buffalo
Bisons of the International Hockey
leegue.'vMl line up with Vaacouver
Lloni of the Northwutern league
thii winter, it WM announced here
tonight.
Moreover, thoie who stayed ln
Monclon during th* off-ieason had
their board and room paid for.
Handling the Hawka ii a difficult
problem. Although individually
itrong In amatuir hockey, they are,
personally, tough to guide, and keep
on amiable termi with each other.
Last winter the westternen and the
easterner! on the team had a feud,
at the start of the icaion. but all ex-
Sect to play a winning brand of
ockey.
JACK  RILEY
and Pete Lcpine for the tint line
center job.
Mr. Riley Sr. haa the following
dope on the Canadlens which appeared in an eaatern Canada publication:
"After a light ikating werkout at
the Forum at St. John, N.B., Wed-
neidiy evening, when the playen
took to the ice like a duck to water,
the candidate! tor Job! with the
Cinadien Hockey club thii coming
tenon worked out Thursday morn-
in» in team formation for the fint
time.
20 FORWAROt OUT
"Manager Lalonde did not overwork hli men, ordering hli 20 forward! out for 15 minutes each only.
Six Unu were lent out during the
morning, three on each end of th*
rink, two mor* men, who had not
nporttd up to noon today, Desilets
ind Frankie LeBlanc, will get their
tint laate of hockey Saturday
morning. They were expected ln
lite Friday afternoon.
"There ii not the preponderance
ot defencemen there wu at the
training camp last year, but lix are
on hand, Caraon, Portland, Sylvio
Mentha, Jenkins, Arcand and Savage.
"Lalonde will gradually Increase
the practice period at thii week goea
on, and probably by Saturday he
stales he will order two workout!
a day. <I
"Th* opening ikating practice has
not al yet hid iti effect on the
filiyen' legs, but tbey were expect-
ng the limbs to stiffen up by Friday. Continuoua work will won limber them up again after thc tint
reaction.
"Lalonde hai decided to work
Jick Riley with Joliat and Lafo-
chelle. The aoft spoken John McGill il another who was well
grounded in the fundamentals ot
sock apd block. John look! like a
professor of theology, hu the air
of a chuterfield off ice. He was a bit
of a buzz ln amateur hockey, who
seldom atarted anything, but wu a
neat finither. So Canucki are getting plenty Of moxie in their lineups with this twain. In addition
there it Jenkins, whom no leu a
judge than Letter Patrick rates as
One of the best blocken in the
game.
"Jack Riley should help a lot He
wu well seasoned lut year, and
advanced to the point where he li
being talked about ai flnt line center. When it comei to further ipeed
there ii alw-yi Wlldore Larochelle.
GMrge Mentha and Armand Mon-
dou who can alwayi be relied on to
turn on the heat at the least opportunity."
Goldman Wins $812
on Horse Races
DALLAS, Oct 28 (AP)-The luck
David (Spec) Goldman ot Dallas
needed but didn't hav* playing
agalnit Lawson Little in the finals
ot the United Statu amateur golf
tournament thii year, appeared today when he cashed a 12 daily
double ticket for $11240 at the Fair
park race track here.
He selected Waterfront and Game
Annie ai the winnen in his combination ticket and they won In
thc tint and lecond races.
AT KIMBERLEY
Players and Fans Are
Responding to
Snow
WiU] the Trail and Rouland hockey camps already astir, the Kimberley camp is now waking from
Its lummer "hibernation." Flurries
of snow ln the mining city have
brought hockey talk, and the club
had its fint meetlnt latt night. Just
what wu decided, suggested or
planned, ll ai yet unknown. There
ii no doubt, however, that u remit ot the fine ihowing made by
the devastating Dynamiters last
spring, that the hockey boys and
tans are anxioui to iee things start.
The president and committee have
further plans for putting Kimberley
on the hockey map again this year,
and ther* art any number of fani
Juit waiting to give their lupport to
such an idea.
Nothing hu been forwarded from
Klmberley ai to training practises,
but undoubtedly, like the Smoke
Eaters and the Miners, they are buiy
getting lome ot the lummer wrln-
klei out of muscles md are looking
carefully to "wind."
Klmberley will have the cream
of lut year's team and two or thre*
ntw men. Their namu ahd pedigrees are unknown here, but they
are expected to be good.
GOLF FACTS
NOT THEORIES
■y ALEX. MORRItON
The reil miming of roiuistencj in
golf teemt to be the subject ot much
doubt.
Certainly there It little doubt ai
to the rareness of conilittney ln
performance. Yet any number of
golteri believe thty are reilly con-
alitent performers.
Thty alwaya picture themaelvw going 'round In flgurei dote to their
bett scores, and when they ahoot
many atrokea above thtlr expectation! they dismiss Uie upset by calling It m "off diy." A! a matter
of tact their good icorei were "luok"
scores.
It they itopped to inalyia thoae
good scores thty would be amazed
•t the number ot "breika" that
alden them ln cutting of! strokes.
Thi reilly consistent playen, like
Sarazen and other first-flight pro*,
iliy golf that la mechanically and
lUlculy lound.
There U Uttle chinci ot error In
thtlr iwlngi. And the secret Is
trained muscles.
DEFINITELY TURNED PRO
BERLIN, Oct 26 (AP)-Walfrled
Winkler and Arthur Gelaa today
clairtied a new world motorcycle
ipeed record of 1817.0 kilometen
(approximately 1123 mllu) ln 24
houn, an average ot about 47 miles
an hour, tor enginu of below 100
cubic centimeter piston displacement
SENATOR BOSS JINGLES COIN HE
GOT FOR CRONIN-SEEKS HURLER
AMATEUR HOCKEY
SCHOOL CLOSES
DOWN IN LONDON
LONDON, Ont, Oct. 21 <CP>-
The amateur hockey ichool, which
hu been operated for the put few
days by the London club of tht
International Pro league, closed its
doo:. today.
Lack of promising pupils who had
official sanction of the amateur authorities wai said to be the reaion
for ciuses being called off.
UM. RUGGERS
CHANGE MINDS
They Want to Pity Alberta in
■Htrdy Cup Playdowns
VANCOUVER. Oct. 26 (CP)-The
University of Britlih Columbia today reversed their decision not to
compete this season for the Hardy
cup, emblematic of western Canada
intercollegiate rugby supremacy,
and they wired to the Univeraity ot
Alberta offering them a guarantee
of $100 and 90 per cen' of the gate
tor a game to be played here on
Monday, November S.
The Albertana have already been
guaranteed $1110 to come to Vancouver to meet Meralomas. British
Columbia senior champions, In a
two-game western Canada semifinal scries as part of the Dominion
senior pliy-down program. Theie
gamei will be played November 1
and 3.
Prevlouily, Britlih Columbia Varsity had refuted to participate in
the Hlrdy cup competition, laying
they would retire from Canadian
Intercollegiate rugby and would
play. American football with college
teams from the northwestern United
Statei. „
TV guarantee, though small,
would Cover the Albertana' expenses In remaining here from Saturday to Monday for the intcrvar-
slty game.
GOLF FINAL IS
ALL CALIFORNIA
Mrs Cheney tnd Miss Traung
Finalists In Western
Title Play
LOS ANGELES. Oct 26 (APV-
Cellfomla. already ln poueulon of
three of the world's greateit golfing titlei, wu usured of tht United
States woman't wutern championihip todtrv "when two of the golden
state's stan advanced to the final
round.
Mri. L. D. Cheney, aeven timei'a
llat* champion and twice winner
ot the wutem title, defeated Mn.
W. E. Shepherd, Lot Angclei, 9 and
4, while Misi Dorothy Traung. 20-
yur-old San Franciico girl, turned
back the middle weit's last hope,
white-haired Mn. Melvin Jones of
Chicago, by the name icore. Mrs.
Cheney, playing the finest golf of
her career, was favored to win tomorrow over the 36-hole i.*—-
Also Must Pick New Manager
for Washington; Pleased
With Big Trade
By DILLON ORAHAM
WASHINGTON, Oct 26 (AP).
—Clark Orlfflth, mitttr trader of
tha big luguet, Jlngltd money
ipltnty In hli Joint todiy—a remit of battball'i blggut swap In
ytira—and looked for a pitcher
and pirhapi an lnfielder to buy.
with hli turplut cuh.
Tha   gray-haired   pruldent  of
tht Wuhlngton American leigue
club aold Managtr Joieph Cronln
to Boiton Rid Sox for a huge
turn and arranged tht deal io that
Cronln,   who   recently   married
Griffith'! idopted daughter, would
bt   playing   managtr  of   Boiton
undtr a flvi-yiir oontraet By tht
Ult, howtvtr, Griffith knocked a
hugt  holt In  hit  inf Itld  and
brought down upon hlmulf tht
problem of selecting anothtr man-
agir for hli National!.
Although he got Lrnford Lary,
the Botton shortstop, In the trade,
and may use him, baseball experts
here rather expect Griffith to uie
Lary in another swap that will bring
a stronger player to the Senators.
The "old fox" concede! he il in
the market for a top-notch pitcher
or two and may need a first baseman it Joe Kuhel, who was out part
of last aeason with a broken ankle,
tails to regain hit past form.
Atked if Babe Ruth might be
chosen as field boss of the Senaton, Griffith laid he hadn't conaldered Ruth or any other baieball
mm for the Job.
McManus, Webster
to Make Debut
Tuesday
WINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP).-Thr**
amateurs aspiring for berths In professional hockey will remain on the
sidelines tomorrow night when 16
regulars and one rookie of both
New York Rangers and Montreal
Maroom fight earpeilly for approval of their coaches, and a ipot on
the 1034-36 lineup, •■ the teuns
stage the first of a three-game exhibition seriei.
Sammy McManui and Aubrey
Weblter, Moncton Hawk luminiriw
during the lut two Allan cup play-
downi, will probably make their
irofeiiional debuts with Maroom
lere next Tueaday in the second
Same. The other amateur, Leater
atrlck'i ion, Lynn, may Join
Rangen later. Lester Is not quite
certain the smart young forward ii
ripe for the moneyed ranks.' Bert
Connolly, from Moncton, hai turned pro, and Patrick will take him
Into the Ranger lineup it the opening of the N.H.L. campaign. He believea Connolly will hold a regular
place.
A Maroon recruit from the Portland entry in the Northweitern
Profeuional league, Bob Gilmore, li
expected to Join Windior Bulldogs
as player and probably play-manager. Gilmore, 22 yun old, carrlei
•»,
196 pounds and perform! u defence-
man.
SECRET INSTRUCTIONS
In making preparation! to fill thc
gap made by the abaence ot Karl
Selbert and Chlng Johnion, defence-
men. Later Patrick hu been in-
itructlng hli new tearguardi, Bill
Cook, Alex, Levlntky and Ott Heller, behind cloied doon. He anticipates a good showing from theae
playen in the serin. Seibert jvai reported en route to Join hli mitu.
Tommy Gorman lent hli turn
through a fut workout In which the
linemen were speedy and the defence bruising. They concentrated
on back checking and shooting.
Jimmie Ward, vetrean right winger,
along with Sammy McManui, new
forward, were outstanding penalty
shooters. In the Ranger c: ip, Bun.
Cook lea li the way u penalty shot-
maker. He possesses a unique style,
batting at tbe puck with terrific
force to get a bullet drive away.
Ranger forwards practiced wave
formations and later the aquad
scrimmaged.
Absence ot big Lionel Conacher
disappointed a large gallery, but
Gorman itated Lionel would be In
uniform tomorrow. He hu been taking a ihort rest after ccmpletlng a
heavy gridiron leuon ln eutern
Canada.
Playen on both squads are in fine
condition although Cy" Wentworth
and Davie Kerr suffered sllghj
Juriei today. Each team wff
Ihrough light ikating practlB
morrow betore the game.
"AH TH WE'RE BETTER THAN
MAX BAER EVEN IF WE DON'T
SING AND DANCE," SAYS DIZZY
Brothers Dean go Through
the Motions on Vaudeville Stage
'■-
NEW YORK. Oct 26 (AP)-Th«
dazzling Deani launched their
vaudeville act today In a crowded
theater.
The curtains rung up with a great
blare of trumpet!, and there the
In the drculng room, whet
Inaugural wu over, Dizzy,,
tired, itretched out to rut 1
Juit aat.
"A1*1 think we're better than L
Baer even it we dont ling t*/i
dance," aaid Dizzy.
boyi are, facing each other betore
a backdrop that
out on a ball field." They are toss
backdrop that represents a dug'
ing a ball back and forth. They are
dressed in their St Louis Cardinals
uniforms, and the dialogue indicates they are about to atart a ball
game.
This Is difficult to beilev* because they are wearing patent
leather shoes.
They are on the stage ilx mlnutu, and they are Interviewed.
Dizzy, as usual, dou most of the
talking. Daffy standi around, looking as though he'd like to climb
down Into the orchettra pit and
hl>. They get $3900 for a week of
this.
In the course of the discussion
they reveal that this is Urn-tier than
facing Charlie Gehringer with the
bases full, three balls and two strikes
on the hitter, and the tying run on
third.
WHO WOULDNT BE?
They are grateful for what baseball has done for them. They are
thankful for everything ind to
everybody. Would they like to uy
something to the audience?
Dizzy itepi up to the microphone,
chikes. and says:
"If Hank Greenberg is out there.
Ah'd like him to come here. Ah'd
like to itrlke him out once more."
A blonde girl In icanty attire runs
out on the stage and demands Dizzy's
autograph.
'Ah'm a married man," says Dizzy,
"see Paul about that."
Who do you think Is the best
pitcher in baseball?" aski the stooge.
"Dizzy Dean," aays Dizzy.
"Daffy Dean," sayi Daffy, and
they both look relieved.
Public ichooli of New York OM
opened recently with aproxlmawl
1.290.000 pupils, a gain of about ltO,*
000 over lut year.
Booki numbering a million and a a
quarter, ln 24,000 cues, were mend
In ilx dayi when the unlvjH
library, Cambridge, entered lt^|
premises.
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BU-HOED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTIAND
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Government of British Columbia
 PAGE EIGHT-
„	
ICT. V. 1184
	
% ClASSIHED SECTION  ttHERtBiyER^EllERMill
(tmmVM-mWfi^X-mmmmVmmmm^^
, jiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimij:
I SOMEONE
II TO LOVE
by VERNI5 CONNELLY
■fllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIHIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII^
*&-tmwilHlHmw'**-w'
INSTALMENT 24
Bruce wu back incredibly soon
it seemed. The truth waa that June
had been too occupied to miss him
greatly. She did not see him immediately. He telephoned, but waa buiy
getting the man he'd brought back
from Prance itarted on his talk of
unravelling Kay'i fate. Now. hia
se .nd day in New York, they were
going to luncheon together.
Seeking a quiet place where they
would not be recognized and could
talk in peace, they finally decided
on a Fifty-third street speakeasy.
As they settled in a booth, Bruce's
hand reached over to dose upon
hers in a cruihing hold. "Dear,
you're 10 iweet"
June wanted to cry. He looked
worn, almost ill. The strain wai
telling on him. If only she could
help him. "I'm so glad you are home,
Bruce," she said.
"Do you want anything to drink?"
"No—Just aome food. I haven't had
any breakfast. I don't get up be*
fo** eleven or twelve any more."
"You ehouldn't —you need thc
sleep. I think you are looking great.
Now tell me all the news. There
is nothing I can tell you—I've got
things started and I am hoping for
the best—that is all."
"Something thrilling has happened to me lince you've been gone.
I've had a screen test and lt looks
as if I could go to Hollywood it
I want to."
"But you don't—surely you don't
wint to do that?"
"Why? It means success—r, .'. mon-
e- "
"But you wouldn't be here—I
couldn't see you."
"I didn't seek tt. Dr. Henderson
introduced a director to me—that
is how lt happened."
"So you did see him—after I
atked you not to?"
"He was at a night club—I went
there with Phil, and then he came
lo the Fountain Room. I had to
let him come—it'i a public place.
Besides, he wai being kind. He hai
alwayi been kind to me."
"I iee. Suppose I order. What
would you like—some Persian melon
to begin with?"
"Yes. And a tomato omelet with
bacon. Tell him to bring some of
those Uttie crescent rolls—hot ones
—they are delicious here."
"I came with Phil."
"You've been here before? I
thought you didn't go to ipeak-
easiea."
When the waiter had gone their
eyei met acrosa the table.
"I ran Into Brownie Sylvester on
the street last night." Bruce said,
"and he took great delight in retailing some gossip—he says that
Phil is furnishing a penthouse, and
the rumor is that it'i for you."
June was furious at herself for
flushing.   She  wished   she  would
Set over the childish habit. "I can't
elp it, Bruce- it isn't my fault"
"I didn't think it was. I know Phil
loo well. He may think he can
rush you into it, but I know you
haven't encouraged him, except by
going about with him."
"The truth is. I enjoy going around
with Phil. He is good company, and
we have grand timei. You have
been away so much...."
"I know it. Perhapi that will soon
be over. But what about thii picture business? You are going to
pass that. up. aren't you?"
"I don't know. Why don't we
wait and iee if there is really anything to it? In the meantime. I am
hanging on to the Job I have, and
mighty glad to do it. I like it."
June dated a tiny feeling of resentment against Bruce from that
day. It seemed more and more
foolish to her that they ihould be
aoarl. Phil had succeeded in shak*
inn her faith In the fact that Bruce
loved her as much as he thought he
did. He was sincere, in his thought
nf courae. but as Phil pointed out,
if lie really loved her. how could he
stay away from her. How could he
fit acroas the table frorh her like
this, knowing that she might go to
Hollywood and leave him. and not
make an effort lo hold her? It would
serve him right if she did go. This
bitter thought would not subside.
After that he made several short
trips, and much of his time was occupied, so that they did no' see each
other often.
Phil made the most of his opportunities. Sprln" was struggling into
manifestation, and they had long
drives, on the Island and in Westchester, lunching at the club, forgetting the city behind them. Phil
reminded her of a wish to ride a
horse again as she did at home.
"Dont do anything about it" she'
urged, "until my future is decided
1 may go to Hollywood, you know.
And I've had an offer to sing over
the radio—a candy hour. But that
is a very great secret and you mustn't tell anypne."
"I've heard of walkaways before,
but you Juat simply run! Congratulation!! And advice. Take the candy
»ffer, and it won't interfere with our
tnarried regime, except when we go
abroad."
"Will you be itill!"
"You are weakening. I can feel
Jt Now, have I apprised you of the
iact fair lady, that our houiewarm-
ing takei place on Eaater Eve? I'm
planning a grand party, and I want
to borrow your Sumhine Yodeler."
"I'm lure he will be glad to come.
And am I thrilled over a grand
ptrty! But I'm having company ov-
They're So Good.'
«   DIFFERENT   VARIETIES
ASK YOUR DEALER
er Easter—a boy friend from Rolla,
Hickory Ferguson, and the Harts
from California—you know I've told
you about them. Will you invite
them?"
Td invite the whole Six and
Seven Club if you aiked me."
"Who is coming to your party?"
"A hundred or so. Will you marry
me before then?"
"Are you laughing at mt or with
me?"
"I'm serious for once in my life,
and you know it."
"Are you going to uk Bruce to
the party?"
"If you lay n. But tell him he
hu to wear a imile—that'i the
password at our houie, isn't it
sweetness?"
The days flew. June discussed the
pros and cons of film work venui
radio with Linder and he persuaded
her not to be too premature about
changes. The Fountain Room would
be closed fo the summer, and they
could suspend the Between Six and
Seven Club until fall. During the
summer months the could try out
thc films, and if she didn't go
over, could come back to the Gilmore in the fall. In the meantime,
she could accept the radio contract
with the candy company. They could
put her on the air at 0:30.
So she signed a contract to ling
three times a week and added two
hundred dollan to her weekly lal-
•ry. It wis a fabulous sum. She looked it the figures again and again.
Then she cried. It couldn't be true.
There was some awful mistake. Misi
June Varick of Rolla, Missouri. Now
the Show-Me girl was alio the
Sweetheart girl. New songs to learn.
By thc time she went on the air
with her first program ahe had regained her balance, lost her awe. She
had learned that the sum she wai
receiving wu modest in comparison
with what many radio singers were
paid. And familiarity with the songs
brought eue. Fan mail poured in,
a.d she was launched,
She spent her first salary from
the candy company for a new evening frock to wear to Phil's party.
It was the most intriguing creation of filmy white lace ever launched, she was positive. With it went a
cape of white transparent velvet.
Then she shopped for gold slippers,
cleverly cut, from which she had
Ihe heels removed and blue rhlne-
stones substituted, for sh meant to
wear Bruce's saphires on this great
occasion.
The Harts arrived Thursday. June
was in her office, which she rare-
I*- visited now, consulting with Mlis
West, the girl who had assumed
much of the work June formerly
carried.
Lucy blew in a breath of spring
air. She held the chubby hand of a
two and a half year-old-boy clasped tightly in hers, a diminutive reproduction of his father, who
brought up the rear with a happy
grin.
"You darlings!" June iprang to
embrace all three in a wide swoop
of her eager arma. "Oh, I'm so glad
to aee you! It'i limply superb thit
you've come for Eaeter. And we're
joing to a swell party. Come here,
Precious...."
She picked up the child. "He's ab-
orable!"
"Now that you've given a pretty
satisfactory demonstration of appreciating our offspring," Hcrtley said,
"what do you think of Mamma and
Papa? Hasn't Mamma unfolded
like—well, like ihe ihould?"
"You look slick, Lucy. He'l being
good to you, isn't he?"
"Can you find us a reliable nurse?"
Lucy ns!;ed.
'I don't know—what about It,
Miss West?"
"There's a trained nurse staying
in the house—ihe'i off duty. She
might do it."
"Fine," slid Lucy. "Will you aend
her up for an interview?" We've
got' a double luite on your floor,
June."
"That'i splendid. You'll be down
to dinner, won't you Lucy?"
"You couldn't keep us away."
"You'll love Sammy, my Sunshine
Yodeler. Brush up your iongs—he'11
ling anything you want. Oh yei—
news—the scared blonde member of
the club and the boy from Australia
got married last week. And the
girl from Wyoming and th * widower from Foreit Hills are engaged."
"Quite a little matrimonial bur
eau." Hartley observed. "Any proposals for yourself?"
"Slews! And all 10 nice, I'd have
to flip a coin to make a choice."
Hickory arrived the following
morning and they had a noonday
breakfast ln June's apartment.
"| thought it wai time I came
herr and looked you over," he said.
"I don't want New York to entirely
spoil you before we get you back
again."
"Nonsense. I'll bet you needed new
spring suits—that's why you came."
"Do I look as If I did?"
"No, you look like a Park avenue
promenader."
"Heaven forbid. I'm Just a Missouri
apple grower'! aon."
"I hope you brought evening
clothes, for If you didn't you'll hive
to buy some. We are going to a wild
penthouse parly tomorrow night."
"Am I promiied a murder?"
"You're apt to be the murder victim if you don't atop sneerln- at
easterners. Come and meet Lucy
Hart now—you'll love her."
"I stl!' love you, June. Isn't there
ever going to be any hop* for me?"
"Hickory, I love Bruce—I told
you. ..."
"But It's 10 hopeless! You'll wute
your life waiting tor him. Sugar, I
never told you before—your Dad
approved of our  getting married
: suspected he did. Come, let's not
be serious. It's like a house party
to have you and the Harts all here.
(To  Be Continued)
Dick Christensen. observer on
Huckleberry lookout in Glacier national park, reports that although
his summer station is one ot the
most remote in the park, he hit
plenty of visitora every day. in thc
form of deer, bean, and other wild
game.
Nfbun Baihi -\puib
Member of th* Canadian Daily
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llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Advertiaen who deiire miy
have repliei addressed to a box
at tha Nelson Daily Newi and
forwarded daily to their ad-
dress. A charge- of 10 cents ii
made for thii service. In this
cue add four wordi (Box —
Daily News) to the count for
th* number ot worda.
TRUTH IN ADVERTISING
The Nelson Daily Newi endeavors to print only truthful classified advertiiing and will appreciate having ita attention called
to any advertiiing not conforming to tha highest standards of
honesty.
Out-of-town subscribers vho
wish to answer advertisements
in which only the telephone
number of the advertiser is
given, may mail their replies to
the Nelion Dally Newi, and they
will be communicated to the
advertiier.
Nelson Daily Newt
Classified Ads bring
quick results — try
one.
PERSONAL
ASTBOLOQY-UFE   READING   AND
forecast, month by month for one
year, covering fully buslneat ar-
tain, employment, love, courtahio.
marriage, travel, speculation, health,
luck; days. etc. Complete 11. Chir-
ncter analysis. 25c; send btr'hdate.
M Kleman, V) Baton St., Wli.r.lpe**.
Manitoba. , (1923)
UNMARRIED: LADIES AND OEN-
tlemen have been joining The
Home Club since 1938. Exchange
letters, photos, etc., with members
all agee, everywhere. Many happy
marriages. Confidential, reliable.
Write fully enclosing 26c. Bos 140.
Vancouver,   Canada. t4t72i
MARRY-INTRODUCTIONS BY htl-
vate letten. New system, hundred! ot lady members. Farmer's
daughters teachers, nurses and
widows with property. Many
weilthy memben. Particulars 10c.
Canadian Correspondence Club.
Box   128,  Calgary.  Alta. (42501
AN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.
Llat of wanted Inventions and full
formation sent free. The Ramsay
Company, world Patent Attorneys,
273 Bank etreet, Ottawa, Canada.
143581
SAVE BY DRY CLEANWOYOUR
own suits, sample dry cleans one
suit. Mailed postpaid for 10c.
Agent! wanted Seven seals salea
Byitema, Winnipeg. Man. (4683)
OENTLEMBN. SAVE JO'*-. BUY YOUR
Sanitary requirements by mall.
Stamp brlnga catalogue. Banl-
Tex Company 709 Dunsmuir street.
Vincouver. B- C. (4366)
WANTED. IMMEDIATELY, TOANs"-
nortatlon   to   Pentlcton   for   two.
' Share expenses. 812 Cedar street.
 (43071
PRIVATE HOME KINDERGARTENS
pay. We itart you. The Canadian
Kindergarten lmtitute, Winnipeg.
(4373)
Ecaema itch Pllei Ulcere. Try Oeo Lee's
China Remedy at Hudion*! Bay Co
 •    (4277)
HELP WANTED
WANTED—OIRL FOR HOUSEWORK.
Muit hare aome experience with
children Box 4561, Dally News.
(4561)
WOMEN WANTED TO HEW POR US
at home, sewing machine necci-
nry. No Mlllng. Ontario Neckweir
Company. Dept. 292, Toronto 8.
(4814)
HOW TO QBT A OOVERNMENT
lob. Free Booklet. The M. C. O
Ltd., Winnipeg.   (4372)
AGENTS WANTED
AGENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK
neckties for us. we sell you at a
price tbat allow! you to make
loo*;*, commission, write today for
tree sample** and particular!. Ontario Neckwear Company Dept. S69.
Toronto 8, Ont,       (4313)
WANTED FOR INTERIOR TOWNS,
men anxious to earn a good living. "You can do thla." See for
partlculara. or write L. j. Deshar-
mls,   cranbrook,   B.   C.      (4318)
SITUATIONS WANTED
3TENOORAPHER-BKPR. WISHES
Immediate position. Box 4552.
Dally   NIWI. (4552)
WORK WAITED BY  YOUNO OIItL.
Apply  to Box  797. Ferule. B. C.
(45771
OIRL   WANTS   WORK.   ANY   KIND
Phone 3»0R. (45751
ROOM AND^ BOARD
WANTED BY BUBINESS MAN. STATE
rate. Apply Box 4569, Dally News.
(4589)
Trout weighing as much as 40
pounds are not an uncommon catch
in Great Bear lake, N.W.T., Canada.
FOR RENT
HOUSES. ETC.
FOR RENT - STORE ON BAKER
street, opposite Dally News, suitable for ofrice or abop or atore.
Rent $25 per month. Apply to L.
Simpson, phone 667L. (46001
5    RM.    NEW   BUNGALOW   TOLLY
modern. Good location. Ph. 777U.
2 ROOM CABIN CLOSED IN PORCH.
Partly furnished. 18 month. Mrs.
R.   Ball,   6th   Bt.,   Oordon   Road.
■  145281
FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
rooms for rent. Annibli Block.
(4281)
FURN     OR    UNFURN.    APT8Bl
week or month. Medical Arti Bldg
(4282)
SjR     ROOMS.     STEAU     HEATED.
■bower, term! mod. Cin. Legion.
(4283)
7-ROOMED HOUSE V»1T_ OARAGE
Phone 88QR. _ M4666)
SlX   ROOM   H6US8   NEWLY   REN-
(4564)
ovated- Phone 48
TWO    ROOM    FURNI8HED    SUITE
for  rent,  Stirling  Hotel.      i42M)
HOUSE    FOR    RENT,    CLOSE    IN.
Phone 828X.  (4620)
TERRACE   APTS   Beautiful  Uodlrn
FrtgHlalre equipped luttei. (4284)
3  ROOM  SUITE  113.  PER MONTH
Union   Roomi.
(4186)
FOR SALE
HEAVY LOOGINO TRAILER ALSO
portable saw-mill cheap for caah.
Oan be aeen it 1416 Vancouver
St. W. A. Latta.         (4673)
POTATOES. HAY AND BREEDING
ewes. Apply Box 4568, Daily News.
 (46*8)
for   Sale - barrels,   keob
■ugir sack!. Unera. McDonald Jim
Co., Ltd '♦3W*
FOR sale circulator heater.
cheap, phone 744L. (4676)_
LOST AND FOUND
BATTERIES. YOU CAN RECHARGE
yonr radio or automobile battery
at small coat. Price of formula
11.00. Seven seals Salea Systems.
Winnipeg, Man. (4688)
To Finders
If you find a cat or a dog a
pockitbook lewelrj or fur or
anything else of value, teliphoni
The D«iH News A "Found' Ad
will be Inserted without cost to
vou w* will collect from the
owner. 	
EDUCATIONAL
THE ACADEMY OF USEFUL ARTS
teachei profeuional Pattern-drafting, Designing. Dressmaking. Thret
Oables Hotel, Pentlcton.        (4631)
MININC PROPERTIES
SIX ,6) CROWN GRANTED CLAIMS.
18 lnchea ore In open cut, two
feet ora In tunnel, 400 aacke ore
In lacks Alao hive aeveral good
claims not crown granted. Seven
miles truck road to boat lauding
at Argenta. four mills truck road
to railway. Norman McLeod. Ho*a-
_er. B. C, ?434*»
BUSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES
Earn $5.00 to $35 Weekly
growing mushrooms. Our famous
"Jumbo" ipawn prepared under
Dominion patented process. We
wiy buy your mushroomi. Send
5c for complete proposition and
illustrated booklet North American Spawn company, 421 Somerset Bldg., Winnipeg.
(4367)
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE       RANCHES FOR RENT
Crystal
BUTTER
PURE—RICH—FRESH
Costs no more thin
other well known brands.
Order from your Grocer
or Butcher.
Fred Williams
Agent for Crystal Dairy Ltd.
«00 Ward St. Nelion
(4566)
ECZEMA
FOR ECZEMA, PSORIASIS,
ITCHING PILES. RINGWORM
ITCH. HEAD AND SCALP
DISEASES AND OTHER SIMILAR SKIN TROUBLES, TRY
A BOTTLB OF SEMO GUARANTEED TO BRING RESULTS
OR MONEY REFUNDED.
Manufactured and Sold at
Suite 1
CHRISTIE GRANT BLDG.,
Edmonton, Alta.
>   Write for particular!
(1985)
QALVANIZEO IRON PIPE AND FIT-
tinga Beltings. eto.-New Wire
Niili 114" IS* _ 314". M.60 per
100 IU Full line ol new ind und
Oilv and Blick Pip* ind fitting!
it. Oalv new etto, 1" Black 6c,
3" Slick lUltibli for Irrlgitlpn and
water line lOo. other ilaei low
prlcea niw corrugated galv Iron
16 00 per 100 equirt feet Poultry
win netting 8 md 6 feet Full
•tor, of iteel ipUt pullesi, Potato
•nd grain ucki Barbed win Wire
Rope, Canvia Doon, Window!
Rooflm Flit. Girden md Air bow
Boom Chains Mirchudlie ind
Equipment of ill deicrlptloua En-
qulrlei   lolicited.
B.C. JUNK CO.
135   Powell   tt.    Vancouver.   B.C
  (4816)
HO-MAYDE BREAD
IMPROVER
Makea bread ot finer texture and flavor, better
color and quality, from
the same quality flour.
Givei larger loaf. Packet
20c sufficient for 100
loaves.
C. tt J. JONES, Limited,
Winnipeg, Mln,
(4513)
PW and ini'lirafe
CANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd..
360   Prior   St.,   Vancouver,   B.   C.
. (4538)
The emperor penguin of the Ant
arctic spends Its life without touching land; it is content to ipend its
time on solid ice when not swimming in the open water tor food.
TO RELIABLE PARTY. SMALL
ranch home about mile west of
Nelaon. Good houae. free furl,
water piped Into houae. 130 per
month. Charlee F. McHardy. Nelson   B_C. (4500)
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
OENTLE YOUNO COW. THIRD CALF
end of this month. Oood milker
165. L. Rabtnlaui. P. O. Box 1831.
___.U__B_C* 146681
VJ, YEAR OLD REGISTERED AYR-
ahlre bull, or would trade for
similar younger one. Box 4678.
Dally sewa. (46781
DOCS
BEAUTIFUL SAINT BERNARD PUPS.
reasonable. Box 539, Cranbrook. B.C.
(45431
_, PUPPIES. REGISTERED
Stock  116. None better anywhere
at any price. Box 1007 Trail, B, C.
(4574)
RABBITS
BELGIAN HARES, FLEMISH GIANTS,
Siberian Black or Chinchillas for
fur. AH «ood itock. The Rabbltry,
Box 135, Nelson. Phone 535. Acton.
(4581)
PROPERTY FOR SALE
THIRTY ROOM MODERN HOTEL,
Cut Bank, Montana. Price 116.000,
16000 cash, balance to ault. John
W. Huntsberger, Sunburst, Mont.
  (4584)
MOTORCYCLES
INDIAN
MOTORCYCLES .
The choice of Experts. Watch
them win at the HILLCLIMB,
Sunday at Trail. Don't mln it.
lev   Di
and Indian!.
RIDE A WINNERI
PALMER RUTLEDGE
TRAIL, B.C.
(4315)
MISCELLANEOUS  -WANTED
GOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED-AP-
Dlv   Dallv   News   Office. .33681
Business and Professional Directory
Accountants
Municipal and Commercial Audit!
P   O   Bn  1131. Nelaon   B   C
(4288)
Atttyert
E w WIDDOWSON establlihed 1900
305 Josephine St. Nelaon. B O
(4380)
GRENVILXB II. (IRTShVOOD
618 Baker St.. Nelion. Box 736
Cuitom and Control aisavs. Chemical analyala. Representative at
Trail for Shlppera' interests. ,4443)
KOOTENAY    LABORATORIES
Auayen tt CbemUtl
Box   1343 Trill.   B C.
(4301)
Chiropodiits
Dr. Mildred Slmondi Foot Specialist
406 Fernwell  Bldg.  Spokane.   Wash
(4303)
Chiropractor!
E. M. WARREN. D. C. BOX 872
Good results Lady attendant by
appointment. Phone 116.       (4261)
Electrical
J. F   COATES—The  Electrlo  8tora
Supplies and installations.
Phom 760. P. O. Box 116
* (4393)
Englneert tnd Surveyori
A   H   GREEN CO., LTD.   516 WARD
Bt. Phone 264, NeUon. B.C.  (43061
t   8.   PETERS
Mining  Engineer
Examination operation and management of mines and mineral
properties. Rouland. B.C
4307)
H.  D DAWSON-NELSON
ENGINEER  AND  SURVEYOR
(4308)
Boyd C. Affleck. Fruitvale, B. C.
Landi.-Mlneral Clalma. Waterworks
•tc. Survey!. Plans and Estimates.
 (4309)
Hair Coodi
England  publishes   14,000  books
annually. ' I
Lidlei'   wigs,  awltcbea.   triniforma-
t'ons,  gentlemen's wlgi and  .uu-
pees,   write   for   free   Illustrated
cittlog. Hanson Co., Vincouver.
(4356)
Florists
BEAUTIFUL MUMS FOR YOUR TE**I
table or the dinner party. Thli ll
their seaaon.
NELSON   FLOWER  SHOPPE.
Phone 333 or 289R3.
_____
JOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phon
343 cut (lower! potted planta
and floral designs^ (43961
Insurance and Real Estate
ROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD
Rea. eatate. Insurance, rentali
Aberdeen  block,  Biker Bt.   (43071
IF DU'ERES'llSD IN REDUCING
your Insurance costs: aee T. D
Rosling. 3 Royal Bank Bldg. (43981
R W DAWSON, Real Eatate Insurance Rentals Next Hlpperson
Hardware, Baker itreet.        (4299)
C D BLACKWOOD Insurance of
every description. Real Eit Ph 99.
_^__         143001
K E DILL. AUTO AND FIRE W-
lurance. Real Eatate 608 Ward St,
(4301)
E.    ANlAlBLE.    REAL    EST ATS
rentals, insurance. Annsbli block.
__430!_
LIFE, FIRE * AUTOMOBILE INSUR-
anci. P. E  Poulln. Ph. 70. (.aoH.
CHAS   F   MCHARDY    INSURANCE-
Real Eatate—Phone 186.
(4304)
Machinists
BENNETT'S LIMITED
For all chasea of Metal work Lathi
Work. Drilling, Boring and Grinding,
Motor Rewinding acetylene Welding.
Phone 593.
324 Vernon Strut
  (4305)
Musical Tuition
VIOLIN     AND    THEORY     PUPIIA
Mary Heddle. Phone 311M. (4MM
Sash  Factory
LAWSON'S SASH FACTORY   HARD-
wood merchant 317 Baku atreet.
-■ <"•"
Second Haid Storw
MCE    QUEEN    HEATERS    CHEAP.
__ Mrs. Radclllfc'a, (4315)
USE   THE 'CLASSIFIED   4DS.
BRINGING UP FATHER
YOU ACT STRANGE
DON'T,-YOU' LOVE:
MS ANYMORE?,'
^
WHY-MAGGIE-
YOU KNOWI
OO-OUT EVERY
TIME YOU Kl-S
ME \ GIT
PAINT ALL
OVER ME
FACE-
ON', t FORGOT ABOUT
THAT- IT 19 TRUE- I'LL
To SE CAREFUL IM
THE FUTURE -
BUTI AM WONDERING
IF YOULL LOVE ME
WHEN MY HAIR tS
CHANGED TO
CRAY-?
-fr,
By Geo. McManus
WHY NOT?
I'VE LOVEO
YOO
THROUGH
AU.THE
OTHER
COLOR.
IT HA--
CHANGED"
TILLIE THE TOILER
By Westover
THE GUMPS
LOST—ONE LARGE MEAL TICKET
>MiN-0UST <rBT THIS.' *UMP-06STao»5
*. vlS^c^-SI.^*1***"1" SOCIAL EV*NT OF
K^2__S?i_ST' b&*-~ •**•• frfteATuvvyaiiT *-»
I   INMARftlAA*- FIRST PICTURES OF B__AUT»ui
*   BRIDE AND HANDSO-ME £ft0OM- HAPPVOTitt    L
Yi£5yl-_<_L_ tJ_«SSwNOM^»^ONy
' J*?__i&7r*>_-.&T§.*!!^^
J»»6_«C_-_>
/ AND THIS UTTUE CHILD HEW»-YMIN- TOR       \
HOW MV HEART BLBBDS FOR     /HfcAveM'S SAK^
MV HEART BU5HM FOR
HIM-THS SWBSTINMOCENT
IKiP_^X.WH0,MBV'*n» HARMED
A«OULIN HIS LIFE-
4^BSTSRQAVWeHBlRTD ,
A BILLION DOLLARS -TODAY
A PAUDER-ANB YOU
"STAND THERE •SIWER1W6
OVER A NEwsVW>e|-
HBAVEW'S SAKE-
I HOPE YOU
&ONT BLAME
THIS ALLOW
TITui'i
H.'H
X.
\jfcir
 	
^^^^^^^^^
^m^^        .
_________________
____________■
 13$
-THI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON   l,C.-8ATURDAY MORNING. OOT. 27. 1934-
RLL STREET
PRICES SLIP
thlehem Steel Is Off
6V2 Cents; Rails
Are Down
ly FREDERICK GARDNER
leeltttd Pnu Flmnelil Writer)
IW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP). -
kl yielded with other markets
mood of depression todty and
N were again revised downward
ground. Turnover declined to
MO ihares.
inkers ucrlbed heiviness of
In in part to liquidation by dls-
tinted holden.
Ithlehem Steel pfd. broke «*•■»
itt to 56Vi on thc omission of a
I dividend.
S. Steel common and preferred,
Ublic Steel and other shares rep-
ntttive of the industry lost frac-
g to more than a point. .
Ills slipped despite a seasonal
i ln carloadings last week. Santa
New York Central, Union Pa-
I, J. I. Case, General Moton, Air
Uction, Du Pont, Inte-national
Ml and International Cement
a tmong issues showing losses
tactions to about 3 points.
le Standard Statistics company
age for 00 stocks dropped 1
t to 60.9.
ie weekly carloading statement
tied 1 gain of 4641 jars to 640,-
but fell 16,725 short of the total
er tgo.
illar valut of United States ex-
I In September, at $191. 90,000,
eased the total for the same
th in tht preceding three years
lett a tavorable balance over
arts of more than 360,000,000.'
Marked and Mining News
tEREST DROPS
ON MAST LBT
Idlan, Pioneer, Cariboo Cold
•nd Braiorne All Off
LNCOtrV-H, Oct. 26 (CPl—In-
* wia lacking on tbt Vincouver
t eichange todty ind thi gold
p lost heavily.
Home fell >> oents to 11.80.
ittn wti down 19, Ctrlboo Oold
Pioneer each dropped 5 and
It. X. wu 3 etnta lower. Den-
wu thi heaviest trtder and
Id unchanged it 43 tfter sell-
lis high as 44. Reno lost 3 cents
MUlet trsdlng.
C Nickel wu ott 4 tnd Big
Jourl lott 1 rent. Noble rive
otf Vt while Porter Idaho
g the same amount,
hyalite sold tt 15.00 but closed
panged it 14.79. Calgary and Ed-
gton was oft 4 and the rest of
oils were practicilly unchinged.
LOANS HEAVY
kW TORK. Oct. 26 (API—Sec.
■ry loins wire noticeably heavy
lodsy't bond market, but prime
litment Issues, as 1 whole, wen
yt steady.
B.   government   securities   de.
ringed    from     l-32nd    to
|2nds of ■ point.
fonlgn group wis dull ind
|ular.
Winnipeg Grain
flNNIPEa, Oct. 3s (CP)—putures
Open High Ww Close
|hest:
. . 78V, 7814 75 761/,
.... 76(4 76>i 75J4 75>A
... 80=4 B1M, 80 (i 81>i
lta:
.... 40% 40'4 401', 40%
_:« n m as
hrley:
... 51(4 5114 50-ti 61U
.... 61*14 63% 51 92>4
.... 93% 84'J 32% 94!i
...   —        —        —      131
...131%    133'/,    131H    132'i
... 137       13714    136       13714
ITt:
"     ....   83%     63%     92 53%
. . 93% 94% 92% 9414
67% 68(4 69% 58
bah whut: No, 1 hlrd 79%: No.
lor 17%: No. 3 nor. 73%: No. 3
I 7114: No. 4 nor. 68%; No. 5.
Jt; No. 6, 00%; feed 56%: No. 1
pim 91%: ON. 1 AR.W. 72%; track
screenings 16 per ton.
jlore Gold From Every
Ton of Ore
The gold you
mint d o 11 n't
count If lt «oea
to waste. Save
lt. with one of
these
lib-cone  Ball  Mills—$220
■l ton ctptclty: 850 lbs.; he.iv-
K niece only 385 lbt. Hrqulrci
■4 H.P. tnd little water, othera
m to 250 tons capacity. Send for
ulletln   no.   118   living. details
complete   milling   equipment
low factory prices I
Isince    Straub Mfg. Co
ion? 681  Chestnut  Bt.
™* Otklmd., Ctl
CNR. SHOWS
MONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)-An
improvement of W,235,000 in net
revenues ot the Canadian National
railways tor the nine months ended
September 30 over Uie same period
last year was shown in a statement
issued here today. Operating revenues od-.-at.ced to $121,962,000 from
$108,216,000, while opentini expenses increased trom $107,308,000
to $114,820,000. Net revenues were
$7,142,000 against $907,000.
In the month of September alone,
net revenues were $2,010,000 a decrease from September, 1933, of
$48,000. Operating revenues advanced to $14,940,000 from $14,082,000.
Operating expenses moved up from
$12,023,000 to $12,930,000,
Bright Spots
of the Week
By   Tllfc   CANADIAN   TRESS
Ottawa: Oenerai Index of Ctntdltn employment averaged 17.9 per
cent greiter in first nine months of
1934 thin ln corresponding period of
1933.
Tlllsonburg, Ont.: A new company has Uken over the Tlllsonburg
shoe factory and opentlon of tht
plant wlll be returned ahortly
Brantford, Ont.: Brinttord Cordate company wlll resume operations next week with mtny former
employeee engaged,
Montreal: Port of Montreil reports
Incresss of 690,480 tons ot coil Imported up to end of September ii
cornpired with corresponding period
of 1933.
Vancouver: The log seal! of Britlih Columbia for first eight months
of 1934 was 1.3 billion feet, Increase
ot 35 per cent over 1933.
East Windsor, Ont.: For compiny
bsi called for tender! for erection
of 1438,000 electric furnace foundry
•t their plint here.
Stratford. Ont.: Stratford Chslr
compsny, prictlcilly closed through
most of summer, Is now opentlng
to capacity.
OtUwa: Dominion bureau of statistics reporU etrloidlngi for weekended Oct. 30 Increased 1267 cin
over total for same period of lut
year.
Port Albtrnl, B. C: The Albernl
Piclflc Lumber company'! sawmill
was reopened this week when 390
men returned to work, following
shut-down due to strike of loggers.
Dow Jones Averages
30 industrials  93.01 off 1.18
20 rails  34.98 off .8'
20 utilities      19.21 off .23
Vancouver Stock Exchange
A P Con   . ..-	
Amil  Oil  ... .	
LC  Pickti-s   
aver  Silver  	
f radian    
rilorne   	
Bridge  River  	
B R X Oold 	
Cirlboo  Oold 	
C ft 1 Corp 	
Coast Brew 	
Oold   Belt   	
Home Oil  .....
Int Cosl	
Mak  Slccar   	
McDougal Segur Ex
McLeod Oil      	
Mercury Oil 	
Merldltn   	
Model      .
Mornlni! Stir .........
Nit  Silver  ..	
Nlcoli 	
Okllts   Oil!	
pioneer Oold 	
Premier Oold  	
Quatalno  ....
Reno   Oold   	
Sally   Mlnei   	
Spooner   Oil	
Tsylor   Bridge   	
VanalU    	
Wayside	
(IBB
Alexandria   	
Anaconda	
Bayvlew    ..	
tC Silver  
C Nickel    	
Big  Missouri 	
Butte I X !_ 	
Ctn R:nd 	
Congress   	
Crows   Nest      	
Dalhousle Mines
Dalhousle  Oils 	
Dentonia    	
Devenlsh 	
Hlghwood SaroH   ....
Ranchmen'! . .	
Md
.06%
16.00
■08 'A
183
11.80
J01
.19
1.08
.60
.39
M
.02
.31
.12
.12 li
.18
.1314
•03%
11.00
1.39
ii
.30
_2
.24
M*,.
.01%
.03
.01%
.61
.31
.06
.06'/,
.01
.26
.43
Ask
.09
tn
165
13.00
.07%
.23
l3
11.35
.30
.69
.35
.30
.38
.13
■k
.18
.04%
.30
.06
11.30
i
1.00
.31
.36
.07%
.03
.93
.89
.33
.08
.10
.36
.37%
.44
.02%
.14%
PicslU    _      .08
DlcUtor     08
Atlln   Piclflc     1?
Pilot        M
sunshine     9.40
Qlscler Citek           .06
Dunwell     16
Falrvlew      .18
Frethold O-S'.i
Oto   Copper         —
Oolcondi  37
Sold  MounUln    10
eo   River      .01
Orandvlew    01%
Orange        _1
8rull   Wlhkint        .0514
edley Amal        .30
Hercules con      .03%
Home  oold        .10
Indian Mines  01
Independent     01%
Koot   Belle    48
Koot  Flor    00%
Koot King  00%
Lakevlew        .01
Lucky Jim  _....     —
Mar   Jon    09%
Merlind      .30
Mill  City   11
Mlnto 16
MortonWoltey         .01
foble Flvt 07%
svlllon             —
end OnllU   46
Porter Idtho  08%
Rtwtrd    04
RoytUU      14.76
Rufua ArgenU      .01
Ruth Hope          .03
Salmon Oold       .11%
Sllvercrest       .01%
Snowflske            .01
Ttylor Wind       —
uniud Kmplrt      — ,
United Oil  03%
VldetU     76
Vulcan      13
WaUrloo     06
Waverley Ting  01
Wellington      ■$!%
WhlUwtter          .04%
:23
.06%
9.60
.06%
.16
.20
3
.03%
.3
.06%
.35
.03
!l3
.03
M
.01%
■h**
.02
.10
.17
.0114
T
.04%
19.00
.03
■0314-
.01%
.34
.15
.09
.60
.01%
.09
Toronto Stock Quotations
Pound and American
Dollar Lower
MONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)—Thl
pound sterling, UnlUd States dolltr and French fnnc deollped on
Montreil fonlgn exchanges todiy,
The pound eased 1 3-16 cants at
84-9 23-32, the American dollar lost
3-16 of ona per cent at 2 3-32 per
cent discount and the franc wit
down .02 of a cent at 6.46 cents.-
Minneapolii Grain
MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 26 (API-
Wheat, No. 1 northern 108 to 112,
No. 1 red durum 112 to 118, Dec.
103. May 100%.
Corn, No. 3 yellow 74 to 70.
Oats, NO. 3 white 52% to 53%.
Flax, No. 1, 180 to 188.
Flour unchanged: shipments 24,-
586. Bran 22.50 to 2?.00,
EASTERN SALES
MONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP)-Sales
of 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today were:
592 Brazilian. 1235 CPR, 130 Cockshutt, 764 Nickel, 350 Mtl Power,
1000 Ogilvie.
TORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)-Sales
of 100 or more shares on the Toronto stock exchange, industrial section, today were: 3395 Brazilian,
740 Br tt Dis. 1700 CPR. 345 Cons
Bak. 945 Int Nickel. 25 Steel of C,
6270 H Walkers, 4320 Dist Seag.
Alexandria —	
Algoma .........
Amity        _ -	
Ashley aold -	
Bankfleld        	
Barry   Hollinger    —
Base   Metali	
Bear  Exploration  	
Big   Missouri    	
Boolo       - —
tradlin —
rtlorne
Bridge R Explontlon ....
Brownlet  -
Buf Can Oold	
gunker HIU  - —...
in Klrkland _ ...
Cm Mtlirttc 	
Cariboo Oold Quarta	
Castle Trethewiy 	
Central  Manitoba	
central Pttrlcla  —
Chlbougamou   -	
Clerlcy	
Coast Copptr 	
Cobalt   Oonttct	
Columirlo   ...	
Conirlum     .   	
Com M It s	
Dome        .. •
Dom Explontlon	
Eldorado 	
Falconbridgi   - ■•-■■
Ood'i   Ltkt   	
Oranadi    - —
Sardrock - 
ranada	
Hardrcck     	
HoUlnger  	
Howey	
Hudson Bay  	
Int Nickel       -,	
Klrkland Lake ...: 	
Little Long lee 	
Lake Shore 	
McLeod  Cockshutt 	
NTclntyre      .    	
Mcvitt'e Qrahammi	
McWatUrs Oold	
Macssaa	
Malroblc     	
Maple Lfif      	
Mining  Corp  	
Moffatt HtU 	
Nlplaslng	
pirkhill	
Paymaster «...	
Pend Orellle	
Pioneer  Oold  ..-.-.
Pnmler Gold	
Reno	
Sakooee	
Vancouver Sales
VANCOUVER, Oct. 26 — Mining
shiresold on tht Vancouver stock
exchinge today:
Listed: Bradlan 870; Brslorne 1900:
B R Con 1300; B R X Oold 10900;
Cirlboo 1900; MUr C & C 1100;
Mak Slccar 3800; Meridian 8600;
Morning 8 9300; Nat S 7000; Nlcolt
3800: Pioneer 190; Prem O 1700;
Reno 3225; Taylor B 1050; wayside
6000.
Curb: Atlln Pae 150; B C Nickel
6400: Big Missouri 800: congress 500;
Dentonia 10.290; Dunwell 2000; Falrvlew 600; Oeorge Copper 200; oeorge
R 5500; Glacier Creek 4000; orange
400; Hald*. 1000; Hediey a 3000; Herculea 1000; Home 3900: Koot B 200;
Mlnto 3590; Noble Five 3600; pilot
600; Porttr I 1000; Silmon 600; VI-
dette 3200; Viking 1000; Wellington
8000; WhIUwiter 1000.
The Consolidated Mining & Smelting
Company of Canada, Limited
TRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA
Manufacturers of
Lead-Zinc—Cadmium Bismuth
,    ELEPHANT Brand
Chemical Fertilizers
Ammonium Phosphates—Sulphate of Ammonia
Superphosphates—Complete Fertilizers
Producers and Refiners of
TADANAC Brand
Electrolytic
.01H
•04'/,
.01
.83
.69
.06%
.77
.33
.31
.87
1.99
12.00
.03
1.07
.68
.08
.96
.08
.031,4
3.61
.03%
.32
1.50
139.00
37.60
.08%
1.92
9.60
.   3.07
.29
.69
.39
.66
19.26
1.19
11.65
23.76
.64
9.79
6300
30
43.50
.37
.43
3.68
.02
.16
1.40
.03
33.00
tl'A
.19
.46
lino
1.38
.98
.30
Antonio
Tltt Oordon
Sm ,
Sherrlt
Slicot  _^^^^^^_
Smelter's   Gold     ..
South Tlblimont .......
Stldacont	
St Anthony	
Sudbury   Bisln	
Sylvanlte      	
Teck   Hughes    _..
Towagamac   	
Treadwell  ... _ -.	
Ventures	
wnte Amulet	
Wayside  .....
WhlU  Eagle       	
Wright Hargreivei ...
OILS
Acme	
AJix	
A P Con       	
Auociited -	
B A OU  	
Blltio    ....,	
Cilmont     _	
C and - Corp	
Ohem Reeearch 	
Dalhousle	
Homt Oil
Homestead O tnd O .
Iraptrlil   Oil   	
Inter Pete  .........
Lowery	
Merland 	
Nordon	
Oil Selection! 	
Olga	
RoyillU 	
INDl'STRIALS
Beitty Brot A 	
Beauharnou	
BeU  Telephone    
ruUltn —
Brew tt Dlit 	
Can   Bread    -.
Can Cement    ...
Csn Car & Foundry
Can Ind Al A	
Can Dredge 	
gin Ptc Railway  
ons  Bakeries	
Dlat Sttgrimi	
Dominion   Stortt   ...
Ford of Cm A 	
Ooodyear   Tin   	
Hiram Wilker 	
Imperii!  fobtcco  ....
Lobltw A 	
Maaeey   HtrrU    ...
Standard Paving	
Steel of Ctntda 	
4.40
.37
dt •
366
3 08
.34%
.35
.87
.60
ffl
6.86
.«
.19
.86
9
13.87V
Mi,:
.08
.61
1.45
.36
.70
40
III,
.10
.30
.06
.03
.10
15.00
6
122
_f
i
3_*
12
10
IS
14
13^,4
ni
"I
Quotations on Wall Street
Allegheny   	
AU   Chem   	
American Cm
Am  For  Pow
Am Ma ft Fdy
Am Smelt Ac Re
Am   Telephone
Am    Tobacco
Anaconda   	
Atchison   ....
Auburn   Motors
Baldwin
Bait   Ai    Ohio
Bendlv  Avla   ....
Beth    Steel    ... .
Canada Dry
Cerro Dt Psico
Chea   Sc   Ohio
Chrysler  .
Com   _   South
Con Gu N Y
Corn   Prod
O Wright Pfd
Dupont
BastmanKodan    1
Elec Pow 6c Ll
Krle
Ford English
Ford of cmada
First Nt Stores
Frerport   Texas
Oenenl   Electric
Oenerai   Foods
General Motors
Gold   Dust
Goodrich    .
Ort  North   Pfd
Ort Wst Sugar
Howe   Sound
Hudson   Motors
pit  Copper   ....
Internet Nickel
inter Til 6c Tel
m
iio>;
34'a
iii
Ki\
64%
w'4 its
14% —
H%     -
M
Or
Jewel   Tet     81%
Kenn Copper  17
Kresge 88 18%
Kregger it Toll 36 V,
Lehn  it  Fink
Mick Truck
Mllwiukee   pfd 3
Mont ward    37%
Nash    Motors 14%
Nit  DaUy  Prod 18%
N   POW   &    U 7?(
N   T   CentrtT
Psc Gss At El
Packard Motors
Penn R R 	
Phillips Peu 	
Pure      Oil   • ...
Radio   Corp
Radio  Keith
Rem    Rand      8'.a
Safeway   Stores 44'4
8 Louis Ac 8 F \%
Shell   Union   .... 6%
S Ctl Edison ... 13%
South   Pacific 18
SUn Oil Of Cll 39%
SUn OH of lnd 33%
Stan Oil of N J 40%
SUwart wtmer 8%
Trxll   Corp 30
Texas  Oulf  Sul 36%
Under    Type 49%
Union   Carbide 42%
Union Oil ot Oil 14%
United   Alrcnft 8 4
United  Biscuit 22%
Union   Piclflc 100
U S Cst lm Ppe 17%
U S Rubber 16%
U  S  SUel 32%
Vanadium   Steel     16%
Wat   Erectrrc   . . 30%
Woolworth       .. 60
TeUow Truck 3
60%
18%
18
138%
37
44%
Montreal Stock Prices
Bell Telephone  132
Brulllan   11%
B C Power A   37
B c Power B  4%
Building   Producu  32
Cm Car «t Foundry   e%
Stn Cement   ..   ..     6%
tn Cement pfd  „  48
Can Oen Electric  150
Can Gypsum            5
Can Ind Al A ■•• 7%
Can Ind Al B  7%
OPR   11%
Can   Steamen    „  2
Sockahutt  Plow -  6%
on M tt S  129%
Dom  Bridge  33
Dom Glass  93
Oen   Steel   wint  8%
Himllton  Brldgt   -     4%
Int Nickel _  33%
Matsey Hirrit  _  8%
Montreil Power  31%
Nit   Brewing „.  36%
Ntt   Steel   Car     -  14
power Corn  -   9%
Price Broi ..      '..:.._  3%
Quebec Power  -  16.
fflitwtnlgin  17%
Steel of Cinida  30
CIRBS
Ase'd  Breweries    11
Brew Ac Dist 55
B A Oil     13%
Can   Dredge  21
can Malting   28%
Csn Vlckers  1
Csn Wineries   6
Cosgrave   Brew     8
&lst   Seagram  13%
sm Engineer  30
Dominion   Tar  3
imperial OU       18
Imperial Tob Can  11
Int Petrol   28*
McColl  Frontenac  13
Noranda  33;
page Henty   71
BANKS
gansdlennt .-•
ommiroa    «	
Dominion - .__,
Imperlil ,.    187
Montreal  200
novi   Scotia       364%
Royal -  163
Toronto      ....     313
MIHL'I.LLAMIOI'S
Dom Storei  -   14
Ford Ctn  A         31%
Ooodyeir Tin    1M%
Ltun   Sioord         66
Lauft    secord    66
Lobltw Qrooerlet    17%
West Can Flour     6
Wilker Brew      6%
SILVERS LOSE
ATMONTREAL
MONTREAL, Oct. 31 (CP).-A
downwtrd trend prevailed among
tilver futures on the Canadian commodity exchange today. At tht close
futures were steady with prices 16
to 35 points lower. A tottl of 43 contracts changed handi againit 74 yetterday.
May was the active leader with
33 contracts traded in. It opened
with a bid of 34.SS and sold it t
high of 94.49 only to aa" to a low of
54.33. The close bid of 54.30 was
down 36 points. March with six contracts sold up to 83.95 and then receded to a low of 53.90 to be bid at
the close at 53.80, down 30 points.
December was also off 30 points on
a closing bid of 52.89 after selling
at a peak of 52.99 and a low of 52.90
with six contracts changing hands.
BREWERIES STOCK
GOES ON EXCHANGE
Associated  Issues Will Be
Taken  Off  Montreal
/       Curb Market
MONTRIAL. Oct. 30 (CP)-Com.
mon snd preferred stock of Auocltttd Breweries of Canidi Llmittd hai
Mtn approved for lilting on tht
Montreal atock exchange tnd wlll
bt called for trading on Mondiy, tht
eichinte announced today.
Tht shares, which an tttm llsttd
on thl Montreal curb market, wUI ba
Uken from thi curb Hit it tbl
cloee of butlniH on Saturday. Tbt
Ilttlng Includes 10,697 shires of pre-
ftmd itock now ouUtandlng with
a par vtlut ot 1100 ind 231.600
shires of common stock laiued tnd
ouUUnding with no ptr vtlue.
Thl Auociited Brewerlei ownt
outright four brewery unlU ln Alberts ind Sukitchewan. Tha constituent compinlei are: Rtglna Brewing Co., prince Albert Brewerlei
Ltd., Lethbridge Brewerlei Ltd.. ind
Edmonton Breweries Ltd.
Canadian Dollar
Up 3-16
NEW YORK, Oct. J8 (CP).-The
Cinadlan dollar advtnced fractionally in tht foreign exchange markeU
today to close at 2 3-16 per cent premium, up 3-16. Sterling closed at
$4.97%, Yt below yesterday's close.
The Trench frtnc cloied unchanged
it 6.60 cents.
Cheese Goes Up
MONTRIAL, Oct. 36 (OP)-CheeM
prlcw idvinced on tht Montreil
produce mtrket todiy.
Cheese, No. l OnUrlo whites, 8%:
colonds,   9%.
ButUr fresh No. 1, 19%; sollde,
30%; prlnu, 31.
Iggi sUtdy; grided A-Ltrke, 49;
A-medlum, 99; A-pulleU, 30; B.
33:   C. 90.
Potatoes unchsnged; Quebec, 40;
N. B. Mountains 43.
LATE RALLIES
IEP CHICAGO
Gains Registered in
Corn and Wheat
Losses Cut
CHICAOO, Oct. 36 (AP)-Vloltnt
utt nlliu thit resulted trom flurried buying In in ovtnold mtrket
led to gtlni todty for corn, tnd
prictlcilly overturns thorp lotm ln
whett.
Corn cloted ttrong 14-14 hlghtr,
Ma; 76Vi, whtat Irregular V4 oft
to '; up. Miy 6!4-*4. and otu
•t 14 decline to 14 gtln.
TORONTO GOLDS
SllPJURTHER
Eldorado, Premier and Noranda Off; Some Cheaper
Colds Strong
TORONTO. Oct. 26 (CP)- The
gold stocks slipped further into the
trough todty in the absence of support from the industrial markeU. A
higher price for bar gold in London
was Ignored by the big producers.
Turnover wtt under 400,000
shares.
Eldorado cloied at 1.92, down t
cents. Losses by 1 to 2 cents ilso
appeared tor Bear, Nlpiising. Cutle tnd Premier. Noranda drifted
back to $33 for a lost ot 60 centt.
Wright Hargreaves and Teck
Hughes produced tht main tctlon
in the big gold (roup, Teck gaining
5 and Hargreaves losing 5. Brtlorne
lott i centt tnd Ounntr Gold 10
cents.
The chetptr gold group htrbortd
t few strong spots, Including Sylvanlte, Aahley tnd Green Stibell
but tht mtjority were etsy.
Nickel blower
on Toronto List
TORONTO, 0«t. 98 (CP)—Tht general decline mide tubaUntlal beid-
way on the Induitrial board ot tha
Toronto ttock exchsnge todiy, the
Hit doling with 31 louts thowlng
agalnit 14 advance!. Volume wtu
tht bnt of tht week, 81.000 iharw.
Walkera up IK ntt to 38K and
Dlatlllert Betgnmi H tol3'4. Ctnada Milting slipped bick Vi tnd
WalkervUlt »4.
Nlokel declined *Ht to 33H. Ford
"A" 14 to 33 ind c. P. R. tnd
Brulllan Fnctloni. olla wen firm.
OUt were firm.
Recessions of t point or mort tp-
paired for Brewing Corporation Pfd..
Cinida Vlnegan, Ooodyiir Tin oommon, Ltura Btcordt and Moon Corporation "A."
Carloadings Up
OTTAWA. Oct. 26 (CP)—Car lo\d-
fngs for thc week ended Oct, 20
amounted to 86,673 can tgtlnst 61,-
705 last year and 49.875 In 1932. Although the toUl wit an increase ot
6318 etrs over tht previous week,
tft«r idjuitlng for the liolldty on
Oct. a thi Index number dropped
from 74.36 to 73.25.
Oraln loading ln tht western division continued light for thlt
tlmt of tht yetr tlthough It wtu
1467 can above list yetrt.
Exchange Rates
NEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP) .-Stirling exchtnge Irregular tt $4.96W
for 60-day bills, and at *4.87Vt tor
demind.
Canadian dollars: Today 2 3-16
per cent premium; yesterday 2 ptr
cent premium; week tgo 2 1-16 per
cent premium.
Frtnc 6.60 centt.
Italy 6.87 centt.
Uruguiy 80.92 centt.
Calgary Live Stock
CALGARY. Oct. 26 (CP)- Receipts Thursday, 230 cattle, 101
calves, 1017 hogs, 145 sheep and
lambs, chiefly the latter. Friday 49
cattle. 2 calves, 13 hogs.
Cattle market was steady for
quality offered. There was a fair
cleanup of the yards for the week.
Hogs steady, selects $7.79; bacons
$7.26, butchers $6.7S, off trucks.
Good lambs were steady, $4.65 to
$4.75.
Cattle, common butcher steers
$1.60 to $2, good butcher heifers
$2.50: common to medium $1.75 to $2.
Medium to good butcher cows $1.25
to $1.50: common cows $1. Good veal
calves $2.50 to $2.75; medium calves
$2. Good stoeker cows and heifers
$1.25 toJ2. >
Exchanges
MONTRFAL. Oct. 26 (CP)—British
and foreign exchange ln relation to
the Canadian dollir is compiled by
the Roysl Bank o( Canidt, cloted
todiy 11 follows:
Argentine,  peso     3646
Auitrtlli, pound   3.8720
Auitrli, schilling 1863
Belgium, belga  -    .2290
SrisJl.  mllreli      /)T3i
ulgirlt. liv    .011"
Chlni, Hong Kong dollin ....   .4034
Cceehoilovull, crown     .041'
genmark, krone    Mt;
Inltnd. finmirk    -Oiin
Fnnoe. fnno     .0646
Otrminy, nlchimtrk    494'
Onit Britain, pound  44671
Holland, florin     663:
Hungary,   pengo 294_
Indls, rupee      .8686
ItiUy. llrt :    J084*
Jiptn. yen
London Close
LONDON, Oct. 26 (AP).—Clotlng
quotttions: Brazilian Traction $11H;
Canadian Pacific $12%; International Nickel $23tt; British-American
Tobacco £6; Central Mining 619%;
Courtaulds 44s 6d; Dunlop Rubber
47s 9d; Hudson Bay 24a IVid; Imperial Chemical 35s; Imperial Tobacco
131s 9d; Mining Trust Ltd. 2s 3d;
Rand Mines £6"i; Rhodesian Anglo
Am. Hi; Rhokana Corp. (4H:
Crowns £121.4; Springs 18; East
Geduld £BH; Rio Tfntos HM! Vickers 9s lOHd.
BONDS—Canadian 4 ptr cent lotn
1953-58 £111%; British 2% per cent
Consols £82 5-16; British 3% per
cent war lotn £104% excint.; British funding 4s 1960-90 £115%.
Metal Markets
NEW YORK, Oct 26 (AP)-Cop-
ptr quiet; eleetrolyUc spot tnd future, blue etgle, 9.00.
Tin itetdy; spot and nearby and
future 51.15.
Iron quiet, unchtnged.
Letd steady; ipot New York 3.70;
Eut St Louit 3.55.
Zinc barely study; Eut St. Louli
spot ant" future 3.82.
Aluminum 20.00 to 23.30.
Antimony ipot 9.50.
Bar silver sttady tnd unchanged
at 53.%.
London— Copptr, ittndtrd spot
trn 7s 6d; futurt £28 lb; electrolytic, spot £31 61; future £31 15s.
Tin, ipot £229 15s; future 0128
10s.
Lead, ipot tnd futurt £10 17t 6d.
Zinc, tpot pnd futurt £12 Hi.
Btr sliver steady, unchanged at
23 13-16d.
PRICES DOWN
ATMOKTREAL
MONTRIAL. Oct. 36 (Cp)-Trtd-
ing on tht Montreil stock exchinge
wu t low tbb todiy with prioes
exhibiting a general decline. Only
a single Issue registered in advtnce.
Tht tlump followed a decline tt
New yorg,
IU tint botrd lot ult since Mirch,
1931. Jamaica Public Service ilump-
•d 30 polnU it 30. Montreal Trtm-
wiyi it 92 wu off 1V4 polnU Conaolldated Smelten dipped 2% polnu
■t 13914. Dominion Coll Preferred tt
100 tnd Ftnmtnt it 62 wen both
down 1 point.
Nickel lott % tt 33% with the
mtjority of othir letden ot motions.
Cockihutt plow idvinoed Va at 614.
Salu 7378 iharei; bond! 111.700.
Eight-Cent Jump
in Bar Gold
MONTRIAL, Oct. 26 (OP)-Bir
gold ln London up light ctnU at
13417 in ounce ln ctntdltn fundi;
I40i 3d ln British fundi. The tiled
$05 Washington price amounted to
$6433 ln Cinadlan.
PAOI NINI
RALLY GIVES
PEG GAINS
Early Losses Wiped
Out in a Swift
Reversal
WINNIPEG , Oct 26  (CP)-In
ont of tht iwifteit rtvtrttlt ot
trends teen on the Wlnnlptf grtln
exchange tn weeki, early loues wen
replaced by ntt glint today it whett
futuru pricei cloud % to % etnt
higher, October tt 71%, December
65% and May 81% ctntt.
The trading picture changed with
lUrtling luddennen In tnt final
minutes u futuru thot trom tht
session's low poinu to clow tt tbe
high for tht dty. Fifteen mlnutu
betore the close, October whut wu
trading tt 73% centa; by tht tlntl
bell thtt option htd gtined a full
cent to close % cent higher.
Reports of frostt In tht Argentine
were coupled with idvicra trom
Australia to the effect too much rtln
Ultra hid brought teir of crop
dimage. Former tellert quickly
turned buyen on receipt ot this
news to tend pricet shooting upward.
In trading 1 repetition ot the ptst
few days, high-grade whett wu
again in demand In cuh grains but
lightness of offerings restricted tales.
Fit trade In coarse grains wu dull,
futures rallying ln tht latt trading.
Still on Upgrade
WINNIPEG, oct. 26 (CP)—Ctntdltn bualneu wu itlll on the up-
indt thli week with continued Improvement reporud from mott cities,
•wording to thi weekly nport of
tht Canadian Credit Men'i Trust aiaoclation. Limited, Issued hen today.
Tht dry goods and Uitut Industries headed tht upswing in nearly
all centres, thl report ihowi, with
thi Maritime provlncu reporting
ules ln these lines well ibove those
of the same period last yeir.
MONTREAL SILVER PRICES
MONTREAL, Oct. 25 (CP)-—Silver futures were steady
on the Canadian commodity exchange, today. Sales were 45
contractu; six Dec, six March and 83 May.
Dec	
Jan - *—■
Feb	
March —
April	
May  	
June  -  —
July  -• —
August  r —   —
Sept  —
N-Nominal; B-Bid
Open
58.00B
53.20B
High
52.95
Low
52.90
58.95      58.90
54.55B      54.49      54.82
Cloae
52.85B
53.15N
53.47N
53.80B
54.05N
54.80B
54.60N
54.90B
65.20N
55.50N
Recommend for Income and Appreciation:
POWER CORPORATION OF CANADA   St' m!!
4Vk% Dtbinturei     5.70%
DUKE PRICE POWER 6% Bondi     6.50%
ASSOCIATED T. tr T. 5V_%  D.binturet   11.70%
ACNEW SURPASS 7% Preferred    7.50%
COAST BREWERIES, Common     8.50%
PREMIER COLD MINES      9.50%
S. G. COX—Financial Broker
309 ROGERS BUILDING
VANCOUVER, B.C.
jugpifivli. dlntr           .0Jj*i
Ntw Zetland, pound     3.88"
Norway, krone              Mf
Pound, riotl      1!'.
■outh Afrlci, pound      4.857:
Spain,   peseta        -13J"
Sweden, krone ..        ..    2811
Switzerland,   franc 3198
United   gtitet,   dollar,   2   3-32   per
cent discount.
PRINTING
FOR
-MINES-
Assay Forms
Time Cards
Payroll Forms
Invoice Forms
Synoptics
Special Forms
Stock Certificates
Mining Prospectus
Ruled Forms
Letterheads
Envelopes
Requisitions
—OFFICE-
Loose Leaf Forms
Synoptics
Ledgers, (Any Size)
Ledger Sheets
Statements
Billheads
Shipping Tags
Letterheads
Envelopes
Ruled Forms
Voucher Checks
Pamphlets
We Con Give You Immediate Service ... Let Ut Know
Your Printing Requirements. . . We Will Submit Prices
and Samples.
TELEPHONE 144
$ty Nf .son latig Nf wa
Qlommrrrial Printing Stnartmntt
 ———■
—
PAOI TIN -
 THI NILSON DAILY NIW*. NIUON. l.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. OCT. V. 1IM-
BULBS
TULIPS—Our own mixture
of many varieties.
HYACINTHS-CROCUS
DAFFODILS
Maan, Rutherford
Drug Co.
REX JARVIS
Electrical Contractor ind
Engineer
Repalra ind Supplln
For Service Phone 844
502 Jouphlni Street
SNAP SHOTS
AT NIGHT
A roll of Supersensitive film and two
photo flood lights are
all that is necessary.
Both of these items
have been greatly reduced in price. Ask us
for booklet, "How to
take Snap Shots at
night." No charge for
booklet.
Allen's Art Shoppe
Headquarters for Christmas
JCards.
*jt\wsWiiWsmmmw>*mwi
TRY A CLASSIFIED AD.
TRAIL JUNIORS
IN CITY SUNDAY
Second Rugby Gome
to Be Played
in Nelson
The Junior rugby gime between
Trail and Nelson here Sunday alter-
noofi ii definitely on. Th*. ban on
the city ti being lilted Sundiy moru-
ine and the city ii open Sunday.
This will be the second game in
the Junior schedule, rfclson played
in Trill leveral weeki ago and
Brought home the bacon to the tune
of 11-0. The Trail boyi were fumbling ln sickening fashion and did
not get their feet until towird the
end of the game. Nelion, however,
-. alle playing fine rugby, was play-
in- without much practise and the
lake city aquad should be even better lit its lecond game. The boys
hive hid i few skirmishes during
the past week that might be termed
a practise. They are looking forward
to the game.
VI. 0. Williams has a fine bunch
of boys at Trail, and they were undoubtedly a little overanxious on
the other occasion. They should do
much better In Nelson. If they start
clicking like they were at the end
of the first game the Sunday match
will be well worth seeing.
The game start! at 2:30 nm.
Nelson will have the following
team on the field: Stan Horswill
center; J. Proudfoot and T. Kraft,
insides;  Jonei and Stewirt, mid-
Smythe's
U-Need-a Gargle
Al a Preventive Agilnst
Germ Dlienei
PHONE 1
Preierlptlom Our Specialty
Month-End Specials
•Coats—
As a month-end attraction we arc
clearing the balance of our lower
priced coats, both fur-trimmed and
plain tailored, regularly priced at
$19 and $21. ffli QC
SPECIAL  *}l*i.\1d
•Dresses—
Announcing the arrival of • new
shipment of Sunday Nite Frocks in
varied styles, colors and
materials. SPECIAL  ...
Phone 151
Look for the Neon Sign
dl_; Sld Honwlll, Hiwklru, line
halves; J. Bishop and Munroe, ends;
Klrby and McLeod, halves; Buchanan, quarterback; Moryii Graves,
McQuaig and Brooks, spares.
MORE ABOUT
BAN LIFTED
(Contlnuad From Pigi One)
irlct people, who have been await -
Ini  the lifting o( the  bin, will
sgiln be welcomed by Nelson trading houses. Nelson's moving picture theater will open Mondiy.
Friday Medical Health  officer E.
a. Blmmonds innounced tbit condltloni u regard! poliomyelltli and
diphtheria were much Improved. No
further  cases developed for eeveral
dayi and the few patient! now In
notation    are    malting   satisfactory
progress.
Of aeven caaea ot diphtheria and
five cues of poliomyelltli treited
it Nelson, there remain but three
diphtheria and two poliomyelltli
caaea now ln Isolation. Tbey are Pat
and Haiel Kellog, Lawrence Oaua-
dal, Tommy pennlniton, Reggie Newell. John McGuire and D. 3. Blaney.
Need of cloae cooperation between
the public and the medical profeulon itlll ealsta however, and ll
li requested that al) caws of sore
throit be promptly reported to the
fimlly physician.
Pure Food
Market
Phone 50
Free Delivery
See Our Windows for
Choicest Meat ot Lowest Prices
CHOICEST BOILING £<•
BEEF:  Ib 0
POT ROASTS: 0 Q 1A<
Choicest: Ib. .03 IU
PRIME RIB ROLLED: OA<.
FRESh'vEALSTEW: tir*
3 Ibs Ld
CHOICE   ROASTI NC:
Tf: 1012''
LOIN MUTTON
CHOPS: 2 Ibs.
VEAL STEAK:
2 Ibs	
FRESH MINCED
SUET: Ib	
FRESH KILLED
FOWL: Ib. ...
EGGS: Grade C;
2 doz	
35*
25'
15f
16*
45'
BURNS & Co., Ltd.
STONE
CROCKS
FROM 2 TO 15 GALLONS
)UST THI THING YOU NEED
FOR PICKLES, ECCS, ETC.
400 PER GALLON
LIDS EXTRA
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Company, Ltd.
WHOLESALE RETAIL
MORE ABOOT
AUSTRIAM
(Continued From Fiji Oni)
the end of the yeir, and said "great
masses of armi are smuggled across
Austrian borders."
Socialists and Communists opposition continued to harass the government.
DEMAND PENALTY
BELGRADE, Oct. 26 (AP).—Pre*
mier Nikola Usonovitch today promised Yugoslavia that his government
will never reit until the assassins of
the late King Alexander have bten
brought to Yugoslavia.
In the new government's first
declaration before the full parliament, he pledged, ln addition, unceasing efforts to root out Yugoslav
terrorists living In neighboring
statei.
(French authorities laid the Mar*
leilie murder gang had been harbored in Hungary, and the Little
Entente in iti recent meeting it
Belgrade discussed steps to end Balkan terrorism through International
action.)
To the cheen and acclamations of
the entire house, the cabinet chieftain declared that his government
would carry out Alexander's last
testament to the letter and defend
Yugoslavia to the uttermost.
CROATIANS THREATENED
BUDAPEST, Oct. 26 (AP).—All
Croatian political refugees in Hungary will be placed under permanent police control, authorities announced today.
ARRE8T IN TURKEY
ISTANBUL, Oct. 26 (AP) .-Acting on information aupplied by the
Trench police, Turkish authoritiei
today arrested a man suspected of
complicity in the assassination! of
King Alexander of Yugoslavia and
Foreign Minister Louis Barthou of
France.
The police declined to reveal the
man's name.
McDonald
COMPANY
PHONE  161
Free Delivery
SPECIALS FOR
SATURDAY AND
MONDAY
Butter: Sunnybrook J Ctf
Creamery; 2 Ibs.  ■ *mO
Cheeie: Canadian; \Oc
Lb  10
Mincemeat—Argood    New
Season's; OQtf
2 Ibs **<"
i _______________—-————-—
Pumpkin: Large tins, fancy
quality; \A<*
tin   '-x
4 Cakes Lux Toilet Soap:
1 pkt. Rimo: OCc
All  for    LO
Ketchup: Heinz, 01 <■
large  bottles;  each Ll
Coffee: Chase & OQc
Sanborn's; tin Oj
Peai: Royal City, Sieve No.
5, 2s; OC*
2 tins  LO
Tiuue: Purex, Large OCtf
rolls; 3 rolls LO
Marmalade: Empress 0O<>
32-oz. jar; each .. OL
Sweet Potatoes: OQf
3 Ibs LV
Apples: Extra fancy, Mcintosh; OC*
5. Ibs LO
box   «?1.05
Celery: White Crest; IP*
2 bunches   10
Lettuce: Large IA*;*
heads;  each   .....  lv
Tomatoes: Firm 1A0
selected; Ib IU
_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_B_-___r
MORE ABOUT
H.
(Continued Fram Piji Oni)    *
uld be ww not yet In a politico
to make any statement on the
matter. He Intimated, howenr, he
might make one before tbe mass
buylni commission itarted hearings next week.
The iltuation save rise to many
rumors tonl|ht that Mr.  Stevens
had declined to alter hli position
and would ml|n from tbe chairmanship  ol  the commission  and
possibly  from  the cabinet.  These
could not he verified.
Mr. Stevens could not bs reached
and   other   ministers   declined   to
comment further than to Ultimata
that  the  members  of   tbe  cabinet
were not all  critical  ot  tbe  head
of the commlulon.
Meanwhile, work of preparing for
the opening of the Inquiry next
week went on apace. It waa evident
that unttl yuterday Mr. Steveni bad
no plans for relinquishing tbe chair*
manshlp of the royal commlulon.
The booklet whleb started the
trouble was Issued by Mr. Stevens
dated July 37 and 3000 copies were
prlnftd ln English. It wai wld to
be the text of a ipeech delivered
by him before tbe Study club of
Conservative members. Early ln Aug
ust copies became available ln con
slderable numbers.
Exception was taken that lt con
talned observations which ihould
not hive been made by one member
of a commlulon before tbe Inquiry
was completed. Premier Bennett
reached the decision that the book*
let ahould be suppressed. He gave
Instructions accordingly and, while
no more copies went out. thow
already ln circulation were reprinted and became available to thi
public.
At that time Mr. Stevens wu itlll
ln western Canada aod. before he
nturned, eut, Mr. Bennett bad
sailed for Europe to attend the
League of Nations awembly. Accord
Ingly they never met to discuss the
situation until Mr. Bennett return-
ed. Secretary ot State C. H. Cahan
wbo wm reported to have objected
to the pamphlet, ww on a trip to
the orient and returned reoently.
This meeting preunted the first
opportunity for cabinet meetings ln
which ao many memben were present with the prime mlnllter presiding. An executive uulon ln private
on Monday afternoon will be the
first sitting of tbe prloa spreads and
mass buying commission to take up
the work left uncompleted by thl
Steveni parliamentary committee.
Public hearings wlll begin on
Tuesday with Inquiry Into the flah*
Ing  Industry  under way.
Additional Information hu bMn
secured ln regard to the livestock
marketing, packing, canning, mill*
Ing and baking Industries. A report
wlll be made on chain itore mer
chandlilng.
In the by-election campaigns a
montb ago, Rt. Hon. Mackenale
King, Liberal leader, criticized Mr.
Stevens for luulng the pamphlet
and questioned bla right to continue
w chairman of the commlulon for
this reaaon. Repercussion! of the
pamphlet luue are expected to be
hurd from Liberal members of thi
commlulon next wwk.
The commission la composed of
five government memben, thrw Lib
erels and one United Farmen ot
Alberta member. Additional to Mr.
Stevens en tha commlulon an 3.
L. Haley (Llb.-Hantsklngs). E. J.
Toung (Lib.-Weyburn), Sam Factor,
(Ltb.-Toronto Northwest), W. W.
Kennedy «Jons.-Wlnnlpe» South
Center), M. C. Senn (Cons.-Haldl-
mand), Thomu Bell (Cons.-Saint
John Albert), A. M. Edwards, (Cops.
Waterloo South) and D. M. Kennedy
(UTA-Peece Blver).
MORE ABOUT
OSBORNE
(Continued From Page Oni)
most fortunate in securing Mr. Osborne's assistance and the benefit
of hit wide experience, especially
during the period of organization
and in the early stages of the operation of the Bank of Canada. We
are indebted to Governor Montagu
Norman and the directors of the
Bank of England for making available his services."
The minister' further announced
that a French-Canadian would
shortly be appointed as assistant
deputy governor of the bank.
Mr. Osborne is 52 yean of age.
He was educated at Charterhouse
and entered.the Bank of England
at the age of 20. During his 32 years'
connection with the Bank of England he has had a wide and varied
experience.
Before taking over his present
duties he organized the overseas
and foreign departments as well as
the statistical department He has
also had European experience ln
connection with the stabilization ot
credits, organization of the bank for
international settlements and other
important financial matters.
MORE ABOUT
BRITISH PAIR
(Continued From Page One)
cout of Australia. On the 1388 mill
trip then was a possibility of their
meeting, other contenders in the
England-to-Austrilla race, flying ln
the opposite direction.
Squadron Leader Malcolm MacOngor and Henry walker, New Zealand flyers for whom anxiety had
been felt for soma time, finally
landed at Cloncurry, about 800 milei
from Darwin, Australia, on tbe direct route to tbe semi-final control
point here.
Another pair of New Zealanden.
J. D. Hewett and C. E. Kay took off
from port Derwln for CharievUle
only a tew minutes after Mac-
Oregor's landing at Cloncurry, with
a chance of being fifth to finish.
Seventh arrival on the Auatralla
continent wu expected to be O. J.
Melrow, a native of South Australia,
who hopped off from Batavia, Java,
wrly today.
Squadron Leader D. E. Stodart and
K. O. Stodart of England wen unreported after leaving Batavia.
Back at Singapore tbe lone Danish
entry. Licit, m. Hansen, wu awaiting the arrival of baggage he hid
left behind at Alor star, the previous checking point In the Malay
statu
The Dutch plane of D. L. AsJW
and Q. J. OeyUndorfer wu dutroyed
by fin at Allahabad when tt collided with an automobile on thl
airfield. No one wu inquired.
Hallowe'en Fun
Will Be Scarce
Htilowe'en tun li likely to bo
scarce thli year for tho youngsters.
Trail bM opposed tho Idea of having any organised tun, Klmberley
police have warned there muet be
no pranks, and Kelson la taking no
steps to provide the usual frolic.
MORE ABOUT
MR. SINCLAIR
(Continued From Pigi Om)
ministration would withhold support from Sinclair wu solidified today by publication ot a letter to
the Democratic gubernatorial can
dldate from Oeorgi Creel, withdrawing hli bucking. Creel wu an unsuccessful candidate tor the nomination.
It ww established tbat Creel carried ln his pocket a copy of thla
letter ot repudiation when he con-
ferred earlier tn the wwk with
President Rooeevelt at tha white
houu and wltb Senator Olbba McAdoo of California.
At tbat time Crwl itated publicly he ww going to California to
"asseu" tha situation.
It wu learned that form letters
for endorsing many Democratic candidate had been prepared at Democratic committee headquarten to
go out over parley's signature, to
be stamped ln green Ink, as the
story wu told, a Caltfornlan uked
for a letter on Sinclair and a minor
employee unt one befon It ww
authorized.
The recipient of the letter ln California wu reported to bave gotten ln touch with Emil Hurja, executive secretary, who ww uniformed
of the developments. Hurja assumed
that Farley had wnctloned the letter since lt bon hli green Ink
signature and, upon requeat, said
lt could be msde public.
Thus the comdey of erron progressed end now the Democrats hen
are remaining u quiet w poulble.
SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 36 (AP)—
Upton Sinclair, Democratic candid
ate for governor of California, an
nounoed today that hla epic or
ganlutlon would continue functioning regardleaa of the outcome of
tbe approaching election.
Deeplte growing prediction! of defut for Sinclair and victory for acting Oovernor Frank F. Merriam, Sinclair headquarten hen wld ln a
atatement tbat the pendulum of
publlo feeling wu again turning to.
ward the Democratic candidate.
NEWS OF THE DAY
HE   GYRO   HOEDOWN   AD
(MM)
British     Newspapers,     Magailnes,
Periodicals, WUllama Newa Stand.
(4804)
TURKEY DINNER »T. PAUL'S
CHURCH MONDAY, NOV. ttb. TICKETS  80C. (4588)
PROMPT,   COURTEOUS   SERVICE.
PHONE 93 B.B. TAXI * BAOOAOE.
(4S30)
Reserve   Thunday,   November  M,
for Kayla Mlteel, famoua Canadian
violinist. (4595)
For Rent—9 rm. unfura. suit*.
Winter rates, 189. Alao turn, suites
130 and up. Kerr Apia.        (4824)
Keep December 7 for Dloken'i
"Cricket On Thi Hearth," by St.
Paul'a playen. (4595)
Junior rugby game, Trail vs. Nelson, Recrutlon grounds, Sunday,
ito p.m. (4893)
"TWENTY ORAND" FINE CUT
NOW IN 10c PACKAGES AT VALENTINE'S. (4341)
When you wint i Taxi ride ln a
Bulck phone 35, Nelion Transfer
Co.. Ltd. (4319)
Reid Dr. MCCoy'a artlclu on
Diphtheria, ln Vancouver Sun. Oet
your coplw at Nelion Newi Depot.
Phone 387. (4991)
GENERAL ELECTRIC RADIOS hive
the greatest nnge of stations, short
•nd long wave. Investigate onr 193S
models, wonderful values. FLEMING'S
STORE, FAIRVIEW. (1596)
I. O. D. E. benefit bridge at members' homu November 1 to 13. Auction or contract. Anyone wishing to
play phone Mrs, W. O. Rou or Mn.
W. S. King. (4993)
Contributions of flowen, frnlt,
vegetable*! and other suitable decorations are requested for the HARVEST SERVICES at ST. SAVIOUR'S
ehnrch. These should be left at the
CHURCH as early w poulble today.
(4988)
MORE ABOUT
QUEEN MILL
(Continued From Page One)
covered in the summer, and opened
by a long drift, to the surface, at
the portal of No. 3 turnel, near
which the shaft head will be, is 400
feet The lowest lection of the new
•haft ii being excavated first, by a
raise from No. 7 levej to No. 5, which
is 230 leet ibove. So far the raise
hai gone up 150 feet When No. S
is reached, a bulkhead will be built
over the pit, and then tie section
from No 9 to No. 3 will be excavated
by raise, while simultaneously from
No. 7 a winze will be sunk 150 feet,
for a No. 8 level
The new shaft about SOO feet from
the old one, which goei down from
r!o. 2, will eliminate a great deal of
underground haulage, as the direction in which the ore has developed
ii away from the old shaft/ore under preient condltloni having to be
hauled a considerable distance to
the shaft, and then, after being
elevated to No. 3, hauled in the opposite direction an equal distance to
issue from the portal. The vein is
practic.-// vertical, and the new
shaft is being located a little to one
side from it.
From the shaft-house to the coarse
crusher plant will be approximately
400 feet and the ore cars will be propelled over a connecting surface
tram.
CREW NOW 54
Camp accommodation is being increased by construction of a separate drying room for the crew, the
space ln the bunkhouse formerly
occupied by the dry room being converted to rooms. This gives accommodation for about 50 men. In addition there are some cottages, while
some of the crew also live in Salmo.
The crew has been increaied recently, and now, Inclusive of staff,
embraces 54 men.
A representative of the General
Engineer/" company of Salt Lake
City is designing the mill lant, and
supervising its construction and installation.
SEATTLE. Oct 2« (AP)—Rugby
football will be introduced to Seattle sports fana in the near future.
At an enthusiastic meeting here
the Seattle Rugby Football club
was formed ana W. G. Coventry
elected chairman. Memben of the
committee are Frank D. JohnBOn,
W. Allen and Robert W. Williamson.
Raoul E. Gripenwaldt was elected
secretary.
The first practice of the new club
will be held at lower Woodland
park on Sunday, November 4, starting at 10 o'clock.
Secretary Gripenwaldt announced
yesterday that any one Interested In
the rugt- club should call him.
One-third of all students in Initltutloni of higher education in
Soviet Russia are women.
MORE ABOUT
BRITISH HOUSE
(Continued From Page One)
reconciled to carry on the fight
for independence along constitutional lines.
Among doihestlc business still on
the books for the present parliament are the betting and lotteries
bill, the inc'tement to disaffection
bill and the electricity supply bill.
For the new session might be added
the housing bill which will cause
considerable debate, providing for
more vigorous measures to relieve
overcrowding, and greater expenditure! on rehousing in which it will
be cardinal point to extend the activities of preient public building
societies.
The betting and lotteries bill is
chiefly designed to curb gambling
in connection with greyhound racing which has had a mushroom
growth in England's cities. Dog
raclnr will be restricted to 104 days
in the year. The bill continues the
prohibition on large lotteries but
permits the small, sporadic lotteries.
Doubtless there will be renewed
clamor for approval of state lotteries.
The Croumore. N.C, school for
mountain children is financed by the
sale of old clothes.
HEALTH
BULLETIN
Condition! II regards Poliomyelltli and Diphtheria have lm-
proved very much. Ai no cases
have appeared In several days It
ll considered permlulble to remove ill reitrlctlom •■ from
Sundiy morning, Oct. 28th.
Schooli wlll reopen on Mondiy
ll uiuil.
Thl need for clou cooperation
between the public and the profeulon itlll exists however, ind
It ll requested thlt all cases of
sore throit bi reported promptly
to the fimlly physician.
Signed on behalf of the Medical Profeulon:
W. O. ROSE, Pruldent;
FRED M. AULD, Secretary.
E. G. SIMMONDS, Medical
Officer of Health.
SEATTLE TO SEE
RUGBY FOOTBALL
A Prevention Is Better Than a Cure
It Is Your Protection to
WEAR GLEAN CLOTHES
CLEAN CLOTHES MEAN GOOD HEALTH
ALL WORK DONE IN OUR LAUNDRY IS
STERILIZED
Alio dil* to ths fact that all garments handled in our
Dry Cleaning Plant, operating only the mott modern
and unitary equipment, are finished on Steam Presses,
they too are
STERILIZED
STERILIZATION by live steam is the best method ef
killing germs.
Why take a chance when you can have your flat work
washed and STERILIZED for only 40c per doien in
mixed lots?
Wear Clean Clothes
KOOTENAY STEAM
"ST LAUNDRY ,HS'
and
Kootenay No-Odor Dry Cleaning Co.
A MOPERe-lTl
PRINKB
oi* Good
Bten.
Hf\p?y
Man!
UTHEN you know lome
** folk! are going to viiit
you, you ,can make lure that
it will be an enjoyable party
if you aend an invitation to a
case of our
Kootenay
Rainbow Beer
It's food and drink
and sociability, and
tt makes its appetizing appeal to
both rexes. Send
for lt
^KOOTENAY
BREWERIES LTD
SmtewkMajut
SwOllUrs
nsxznmxr
This advertisement is nol published
or displayed by the Liquor Conti 1
Board or by the Government of
British Columbia
Overcoats
THAT ARE A
CHALLENGE  TO
FALL!
Extfa cool days, un*
seasonably warm days
rain or sleet—whatevti
the weather, wearers O
these Topcoats won'!
mind it much.
Fall Topcoats anc
Overcoats in handsoiro
tweeds or worsteds, tsi
lored with vigilant at
tention to the smalles
detail. In rich shades o
brown and a full rang
of greys.
$18.50 to 935.00
EMORY'g
Limited
TRY A CLASSIFIED AD.
Christmas
Cards
See Our Display Befor
You Order
50c to $1.00 Dot.
PERSONAL CARDS
85c to $1.35 Dos.
The finest selection
in  the  city
FLEURY'S
PHARMAC
The Much Delayed
GYRO HOEDOWN
Friday, Nov. 2
EAGLE HALL
There will be no paralysis that night.
Dig out your overalls and let's go.
A Complete Line of
HALLOWE'EN NOVELTIES
Including
Rattles                      Everything
Crepe Paper for
Serviettes the
Talies, Scores,           Successful
Priies Party
Noisemakers
Displays
Masks
Party Favors
Gummed
Stickers
1«
GENUINE REXALL
IEXT WEEK! Starts WEDNESDAY and
continues to SATURDAY NICHT.
Thousands of genuine bargains. Come   .
in and look around if you can or mail  SALE
your order to BOX 460.
CITY DRUG CO.
Nelson's Dispensing Chemists
Phone 34 _.»••.    a**,** Box 460
X.      ~jt-l.i*AlJm}S~-.
AnnouncingW L I ■ I **- ---*
Grand Reopening
Monday
# WITH A
{ MAMMOTH DOUBLE PROGRAM
J LAUGHTER and DRAMA
I WATCH MONDAY'S ANNOUNCEMENT!
